Wednesday, Oct 22, 2014, 4:54 pm
The Sharing Economy’s ‘First Strike’: Uber Drivers Turn Off the
App
BY Rebecca Burns
Silicon Valley types often wax lyrical about the way that the
app-based “sharing economy” disrupts existing business models and
create new forms of social relations. When tech magnates extol
“disruption,” of course, they likely aren’t talking about the sort
caused by labor actions.
But on October 22, tech-giant Uber got a taste of its own disruptive
medicine when drivers in at least five cities who work on the
ridesharing platform turned off their apps and stopped picking up
passengers, in protest of what they say are unjust working
conditions and a dwindling share in the company’s profits. Some
drivers are calling this action the first strike in the “sharing
economy,” a sector known for its aversion to labor organizing.
A small crowd of Uber drivers and labor activists rallied outside
the company’s offices in Santa Monica, California, at noon today,
carrying signs reading “Uber: 15 Hour Days and Poverty Wages” and
“Stop the War on Workers.” Drivers in San Francisco held a
concurrent rally, while groups in New York, Chicago and London
pledged to turn off their phones for three hours in what organizers
are calling a “global day of protest” against Uber.
[…]
Continua qui:
http://inthesetimes.com/working/entry/17279/the_sharing_economy_first_strike_uber_drivers_turn_off_the_app