cheshirebest wrote:
I worked with Uber so I have a lot of inside knowledge of how it works.
The customer chooses the vehicle they wish to for whatever reason (mostly they would choose the nearest vehicle).
Uber charge 20% of the fare as their commision.
Here the ''fares'' can range from ''normal'' fare to a surge of 5 times which means the fare will be 5 times the normal rate due to excess demand.This was experienced in Australia during an attack in Sydney.
I hope I have answered most questions and will be happy to answer anything which remains unclear.
The customer can't choose any vehicle. They can choose which service they want (UberX, UberExec, UberBlack, UberLux, UberTaxi, UberSUV, etc.....availability varies from market to market), but I've not known that the passenger that specify a vehicle within that service? The app will automatically send the job request to the nearest driver first, anyway.
An app called Bounce in London does that, whereby a picture of the driver, car, and driver's name and car year, are displayed to the passenger, before they choose a driver.
Uber charges 20%, as they're running a business, and have to make their money somehow. It's not different than a traditinal cab office charging a weekly rental/circuit fee. At least with the commission, you're just paying for the jobs you do "pay as you go", so you only pay, when you work, regardless whether it's busy or quiet as is the case of a weekly fee, which has to be paid regardless.
Yes, during the hostage crisis in Sydney, people were trying to leave the area en masse, which probably includes Uber drivers. So, obviously, when the demand increases, along with a decreasing supply because of the situation, it is inevitable, that the fares are going to surge. Furthermore, why would an Uber driver, risk their life, and their main tool/asset used for their income, to be hanging around the area, especially if the rates were to stay the same. Plus as the area was in lockdown, the police weren't going to let any vehicles inside the area.
Not sure, if your last two points I quoted was information or critiques, but my reply is what I think.