| Does the safety somehow diminish when you pay for the ride? If I give you a ride to work, for free --- then give you a ride to work, but you pay me, what is the functional difference requiring more regulation on the second part? Is your safety affected any different? Aside from the basic protections built in to any business when it comes to collecting money, etc, what extra rules need to be in place. From a purely pragmatic standpoint, what is different about the experience that requires all the extra crap? For example, in many cities where they were losing the legal fight, Uber offered free rides... and were legally allowed to do so, because they weren't charging the customer. Explain to me what was different in that scenario that made it any safer for the passengers? |
In the first instance, both parties can refuse, and can drive in any way they want. One-off rides (or paying for part of the gas in a carpool) aren't much of a worry. This is basically as safe as driving yourself somewhere. Of course, they could be a really bad driver with minimal insurance, so hopefully nothing bad happens. In addition, in these situations, you are usually on a friendly basis with the person - minimally a coworker.
Your safety is different when you start to ride with someone that does it for a living. You don't know the person, so you are trusting they know what they are doing and can drive in a way that is safe for you. The more folks drive, the more likely they are to be in an accident (this is why insurance increases with your commute). Minimally, they need to know how to combat this. I'd prefer them to have a more comprehensive driving test, including things like passenger safety and minimal regulations on driving record/background check. Unlike your friend, I'm pretty sure a taxi service has to have adequate insurance in case of an accident. Many places also have policies about pricing because of shady pricing policies in the past.