rayggb wrote:
It's more the driver accepting the job first that is and was the issue seeing that they have admitted it in a court of law.
Life's too short to go through it all with a fine tooth comb, but impression I got by skim reading was that the meter issue was slightly more dominant, and at best it was about 50/50.
But little point in discussing which issue dominated the documents - I simply said 'much' of stuff was about the meter, which could mean more *or* less of it.
Anyway, the booking argument to me seems all a bit technical and semantic rather than the more important stuff like safety, driver's wages and the self-employment issue.
I mean, how do the apps used by conventional taxi and private firms differ from Uber's with regard the booking process? Is the difference really that important?
You'd have thought a simple software tweak would sort it all out, or the Law Commission could have properly addressed the issue, but, er, um...