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by gruez 49 days ago
Yeah, sounds like a law that's passed because it sounds/polls good (ie. "affordability"), even though it's addressing a non-existent problem and is trivial to work around.
1 comments

Uber pays drivers differential rates depending on how desperate they believe the driver to be. I can believe that UberEats demands a higher premium depending on the item and what they infer about you.
Right, but the law mentioned in TFA is specifically for grocery stores
From TFA

  Maryland’s law bans grocers and third-party delivery services from using a person’s personal data to set higher prices.
That says nothing about the driver?