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PostPosted: Wed Dec 24, 2014 11:20 pm 
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Uber CEO Kalanick indicted in South Korea over taxi service


Prosecutors in South Korea charged Uber Technologies Inc. CEO Travis Kalanick and the head of its domestic business partner MK Korea Co. with violating a transportation law.

San Francisco’s Uber is facing growing legal challenges as it expands in Asia amid mounting protest from taxi operators.

Seoul Metropolitan Government said this year it may ban Uber’s service and similar applications on grounds they’re unsafe and compete with licensed taxi services, and from next week will offer rewards of as much as $905 to people who provide information on Uber’s services.

Uber’s South Korea unit and MK Korea illegally operated rental cars as taxis, an official with the Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office said by phone Wednesday, asking not to be identified, citing internal policy. The official declined to comment on whether prosecutors expect Kalanick to appear for questioning. Uber said it will fully cooperate with the investigation and is “confident” that the court will uphold a “fair and sensible judgment” in the case.

“We firmly believe that our service, which connects drivers and riders via an application, is not only legal in Korea, but that it is being welcomed and supported by consumers,” the company said in an e-mail distributed by its South Korean public relations representative.

Uber, which raised $1.2 billion this month at a valuation of $40 billion, said in August it had sought a legal opinion and that its Seoul service obeys the law. Opposition to its operations is down to outdated regulations that precede smartphone and wireless technology, Allen Penn, the company’s head of Asia, told reporters at the time.

Paid transportation with unregistered vehicles is “clearly illegal activity,” South Korea’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport said later that month.

The maximum penalty for Uber’s alleged legal violation is a two-year prison sentence or a fine of nearly $20,000, Yonhap News reported Wednesday.

Uber, which according to its website operates in 53 countries, started its service in Seoul in 2013. It competes with taxi-hailing apps such as NaviCall, run by a unit of the nation’s largest mobile phone carrier, SK Telecom Co., which connects users with registered taxis.

“Uber does not believe it is appropriate for authorities to seek to punish drivers who are trying to make a living through this service,” Uber said in today’s e-mail.

Seoul’s government has said it will launch its own smartphone-based cab-hailing service using taxi operators.

Last week, Uber’s services were declared illegal in Taiwan. In addition to worries over the safety of consumers following reports of rape in New Delhi and Boston, Taiwan officials are concerned about how Uber collects and manages personal data including name, credit card, location and route, the Minister of Transportation and Communications Yeh Kuang-shih said in an interview.

http://www.sfgate.com/business/article/ ... 978191.php

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