Last year,Punjabi Archives ride-hailing app Uber dropped a slate of safety and security features for riders and drivers. Tuesday one of the tools, dubbed RideCheck, is available for users across the U.S.
RideCheck follows along when you get into an Uber vehicle using GPS and sensors in your phone like the accelerometer and gyroscope. So when there's a long stop that keeps you in the same location or it appears like you've been in a car crash, the Uber app will check on you — and the driver.
Here's what it looks like for a rider and then a driver in the two "irregular" situations the feature looks out for. If you indicate you need help, Uber's safety toolkit comes up, along with Uber assistance and emergency numbers. In some cases, a safety team member might call to check on you. If you say all is well, the trip carries on as usual.
Lyft announced its version of the tool last week, calling it "Smart Trip Check-In." Uber's RideCheck was piloted in Los Angeles at the end of last year and then expanded to drivers and passengers in more U.S. cities earlier this year. Now it's available for every U.S. user. Eventually it'll expand to other countries and "evolve" to include "other situations should it fit under the umbrella of RideCheck," Uber's head of safety products Sachin Kansal said in a phone call. I immediately thought of trips veering too far from the route or away from a destination. But the feature's not there yet.
Both riders and drivers can opt out of the notifications, and if you're in a car with a driver who doesn't want the check you can still use yours since it runs independently on each phone. If both rider and driver have the feature on, both will be contacted.
Here's more on how it works:
Kansal said most instances when RideCheck is triggered turn out to be innocuous: a stop at the drive-through, a quick dry cleaning pick-up, or just good old traffic jams. With LA as a testing ground, Uber saw how it could incorporate real-time data to see if your long stop makes sense and isn't problematic, like if traffic maps show your location in a dark red congested zone.
For other moments, Uber's riding along with you.
Topics Uber
Portrait of the Artist as a Grown ManCinema Is Never on TimePlayback ModeFor the Public GoodThe Sick ProletariatFresh HellOdorless AnimalsEveryone’s a CriticBest travel deal: Save 19% on the Anker Laptop Power BankLife in the Fap LaneThe Uncertain Future of the Queer BeachThe Sun Goeth DownThe Uncertain Future of the Queer BeachThe Revelations Will Be TelevisedUntitled Poems III & IVWithout ThemThe Screw TapesPast in PresentNo ConsequencesRattling the Cage Leigh Bardugo talks 'The Language of Thorns' and the dark power of folktales Twitter can keep its extra characters, I want to edit tweets Move over, ghosting. Submarining is the hot new way to be a jerk. Vin Diesel looks like he just cried or is crying over Paul Walker Instagram now lets you choose who can comment on your posts Amazon's Fire TV bundles massively undercut the Apple TV 4K Apple explains which adapters will fast Say 'Alexa' to the Amazon Echo 2 'IT: Chapter Two' gets a release date and it's sooner than you think Jon Snow and Ygritte are reportedly engaged IRL Intel debuts an experimental 'self A little rocket will launch some tiny satellites to space You can now use Alexa with Amazon's music app '30 Rock' is coming to Hulu Star Trek: Discovery is forcing me to make a galactic decision Loyal to Google Chrome? Firefox Quantum might change that. Researchers detect gravitational waves from colliding black holes Dad tells cops he was speeding home to, um, well you know Comcast is launching a streaming video service for cord 'Outlander': Who is Lord John Grey?
2.1709s , 10137.75 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Punjabi Archives】,Miracle Information Network