Uber installs panic button for riders to curb sexual assault
Uber installs panic button for riders to curb sexual
assault
By Rebecca Joseph May 29, 2018 9:58 pm
A panic alarm is being added as a safety feature to every
U.S. Uber rider's app, which will call 911. It's one of several safety features
being added to the app.
Uber is adding additional features — including a panic
button — to help stop sexual assault and harassment.
The ride-sharing company has been facing accusations of
sex crimes from its users directed at its drivers for years.
A class-action lawsuit, filed in November 2017, alleges
that thousands of women have “endured unlawful conduct by their Uber drivers
including rape, sexual assault, physical violence and gender-motivated
harassment.”
Since then the company has said it implemented stricter
background checks for drivers.
The company also added a feature (which was first
announced in April) on the Uber app that will allow riders to notify 911, and
it’s testing a feature that would send the user’s location to 911 operators.
“We’ve added a feature that allows riders to share live
trip information with up to five trusted contacts, so there are multiple sets
of eyes on each ride,” Tony West, Chief Legal Officer, wrote in a press
release.
“And we’re rolling out a new emergency button in the app
that can automatically communicate the car’s location to a 911 center.”
The feature has been tested in India, according to
AndroidPolice.com , and is now available in the U.S.
Uber has not replied to a request from Global News on
whether the feature will be rolled out in Canada.
The feature is part of the company’s drive to improve
safety.
“It’s clear that sexual violence remains a huge problem
globally. The last 18 months have exposed a silent epidemic of sexual assault
and harassment that haunts every industry and every community,” West wrote in
the press release, referencing the #MeToo movement.
Along with the panic button, Uber is updating its
policies to be “part of the solution” to sexual assault and harassment, what it
called a “deeply rooted problem.”
First, the company will no longer require mandatory
arbitration for sexual assault claims. Instead, the victim will be allowed to
choose how to handle their accusation, in arbitration, mediation, or in
criminal court.
Second, Uber is removing its confidentiality provision
about sexual harassments and assaults.
And third, the company has committed to publishing data
on the number of sexual assault and harassment claims it faces.
© 2018 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment
Inc.
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