Sorry I'm not getting it. Feel free to correct me at any stage if I'm wrong.
1) You can drive a car in Germany if you meet some basic legislative requirements (Führerschein etc.)
2) You can carry a friend as a passenger - perfectly legal.
3) You could carry a stranger who asked you for a ride - perfectly legal.
4) That stranger could give you gas money - perfectly legal.
5) But if you use your smartphone to find strangers willing to pay you for a ride at this point your activity becomes so unsafe that you need to jump through a whole bucketload of extra hoops? Why is that exactly?
Up until 5 you have two people making free decisions.
When you get to number 5 you have a commercial company and an individual, and that changes the relationship.
Here's a US example.
I can drive a car, but if my employer asks me to take a parcel from work to the post office to be posted I need to make sure my insurance covers that commercial activity or I am uninsured.
Well Uber provides insurance during the ride, but anyways...
Why are people in favor of using tax dollars preemptively to defend extremely-profitable insurance companies? If their customers aren't following their contracts, the burden is on them - and I don't see a problem with that. Its not Uber's fault.
In the meantime, Germany is banning a company that has shown they lower DUIs upon introduction.
I think you all missed his point. Yes he knows there are laws. He's questioning why the laws exist. There's clearly a lot of confusion about this because up thread we have people saying it's not about safety, and then we have lots of other people saying it is about safety.
To me having insurance valid for commercial use seems reasonable, but you don't need special licenses or laws to enforce that. Just have a law that says "you must have insurance valid for the kind of driving you do" (which I suspect Germany already has).
The basic point being made here is there is no technical or medical reason why the amount of money being charged suddenly makes driving fundamentally different. You're driving the same car on the same roads with the same driver. So why have governments made it so complicated?
There is a difference: Regular insurances do NOT cover commercial activities – so if you want to drive for uber, you need to get a commercial insurance.
This is everything the court asked for: Appropriate insurance and regular checkups (yearly instead of biyearly).
> you don't need special licenses or laws to enforce that. Just have a law that says "you must have insurance valid for the kind of driving you do"
Licenses provide the proper checks and balances proving that the driver has complied with their legal requirements. The license is typically shown somewhere in the taxi, so the fare can see that they are covered if anything bad were to happen.
That's of course assuming the fare knows about this, which for foreigners isn't always the case.
While there have been a lot of replied I think the main reason 5) is not legal is because it is much more likely that a driver will do this 12h a day for 6-7 days a week.
So he will spend more hours on the road which is more demanding for him as well as his car, which is why it requires more regulation.
5 is not about safety. You enter a regulated market once in case 4 the money you give to the stranger exceeds the cost attached to the ride, smartphone or not. On top, you have no insurance coverage anymore.
1) You can drive a car in Germany if you meet some basic legislative requirements (Führerschein etc.)
2) You can carry a friend as a passenger - perfectly legal.
3) You could carry a stranger who asked you for a ride - perfectly legal.
4) That stranger could give you gas money - perfectly legal.
5) But if you use your smartphone to find strangers willing to pay you for a ride at this point your activity becomes so unsafe that you need to jump through a whole bucketload of extra hoops? Why is that exactly?