• @iforgotmyinstance
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    759 months ago

    So what I dislike about this is that the driver is the one choosing. If the customer was placing their preference, and then Lyft agrees to attempt to place them with their preference (for a surcharge of course, priority service shouldn’t be free) that would be something I could get behind. Letting drivers flat refuse service to someone based solely on their gender sounds like opening the doors to discrimination suits.

    • @[email protected]
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      119 months ago

      Conceptually, sure. But I imagine it’d be a potential lawsuit over workplace discrimination. Especially if the female drivers are being paid more for the same service.

      • @bob_wiley
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        7 months ago

        deleted by creator

      • @[email protected]
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        -39 months ago

        Female workers make more in a number or jobs, especially pretty or flirtatious women make much more in jobs that have tips

  • @geekworking
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    739 months ago

    Male drivers get your discrimination lawsuits ready for your lost income.

    • Nix
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      159 months ago

      Did you even read the article? How would women drivers deciding they want more women and nb passengers cause male drivers to lose income…

      How is this the most upvoted comment

      • @mind
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        209 months ago

        deleted by creator

      • @qooqie
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        149 months ago

        Next they should add white people to be able to get only white drivers to make them comfortable! /s It’s obviously sexist and not a real solution to their issues

      • @Sniper
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        8 months ago

        Removed by mod

    • FlumPHP
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      29 months ago

      Your comment makes no sense given the details provided in the article. The toggle runs a gender-based sort on available passengers when a driver indicates they’re ready to pick up a new passenger.

      • Male driver, without this toggle, indicates they’re ready for a passenger? All waiting passengers are sorted by current algorithms.
      • Female+ driver, with this toggle off, indicates they’re ready for a passenger? All waiting passengers are sorted by current algorithms.
      • Female+ driver, with this toggle on, indicates they’re ready for a passenger? All waiting passengers are sorted by gender then current algorithms.

      At no point does the pool of available passengers for male drivers decrease.

        • FlumPHP
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          19 months ago

          You’ve changed the perspective to potential wait time for male passengers. That may be true but it doesn’t have an adverse impact on male drivers, which is what was stated in the comment I replied to.

          It is objectively always better to be in the women+ group than outside of it.

          Based on Ubers data, women+ are raped five times as often in ride shares. “Objectively” I bet a lot of women+ would choose “maybe a longer wait” over “5x chance of being raped”.

  • @malloc
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    619 months ago

    This idea of feeling safe is causing us to regress as a society. This “feature” is just discrimination wrapped in a nice sounding name — “Women Plus Connect” and UI.

    We used to be able to identify the predators in our communities and do some sort of action: jail them, shame them, beat them up, whatever. Now we are using fear of them to perpetuate discrimination and AVOID them.

    • @[email protected]
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      379 months ago

      We were historically terrible at identifying predators and mostly let them alone to victimize or if their victims were less important destroyed victims lives as a matter of course leading to wide scale silence by victims.

      We have less crime by far and prosecute more scumbags than we did 50 years ago.

      Communities “handling” bad folks by individual violence never worked worth a shit because communities have always cared about whose more important than who is right and it doesn’t meaningfully scale which is why it never worked worth a shit it real life.

      In order to deal with shit heads you have to have a dispassionate authority whose job it is to prosecute shit heads who isn’t politically bound to give a shit about your penny ante local bullshit and the expectation that local yokels will properly do their job and push shit up the food chain or be held accountable.

      • Thom Gray
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        29 months ago

        A dispassionate authority is more effective at protecting local communities from predators, but at what price? Unfortunately that dispassionate authority also has little compassion for the poor and marginalized people it rules and even less accountability to them. I’m also more afraid of the Orwellian police state being proliferated by the marriage of federal law enforcement and multinational corporations than criminals in my neighborhood. Those people breaking the law in my neighborhood probably need better access to mental healthcare instead of long sentences in federal prisons handed down by said dispassionate authority.

        • @[email protected]
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          39 months ago

          Our justice system is a POS but fixing it is the only reasonable path forward. Community “justice” is how we got lynchings. It was and would continue to be a horror.

          • Thom Gray
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            29 months ago

            I highly recommend Howard Zinn’s book “A People’s History of the United States” to gain a better understanding of how and why such deplorable things took place in the US.

      • @5BC2E7
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        29 months ago

        That’s half of the story the breakdown of drivers and riders would make it look even worse (i am assuming most drivers are actually male)

    • Otter
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      219 months ago

      They’d need a toggle for the feature on the rider side as well. Like “hide my gender”

    • @glimse
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      159 months ago

      Wouldn’t need it at all if rideshare drivers stopped sexually assaulting passengers

      • @[email protected]
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        289 months ago

        There are plenty of sexually aggressive riders too. It’s not one sided. We can summarize it thus: people suck.

        • @[email protected]
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          129 months ago

          Perhaps this whole “random people using their regular car to give rides to total strangers” thing was a bad idea…

          What if instead the rides were given in specially modified cars that can include some security features for both parties? And in order to pay for this, perhaps there could be some kind of central company that owned the cars and simply hired the drivers?

          • @[email protected]
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            99 months ago

            That’s just crazy talk. Next you’ll tell us there should be really big municipally-run cars that a whole bunch of people can ride at once which makes multiple stops. Insanity!

          • @[email protected]
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            29 months ago

            On one hand, yes. On the other hand, have you known many companies that have successfully weeded out creeps that work there?

        • @glimse
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          69 months ago

          True! Good point

        • FlumPHP
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          39 months ago

          riders were the accused party 43% of the time in sexual assault incident reports

    • AnonTwo
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      29 months ago

      I’d assume if you get legal action thrown at you though, it’d be a lot harder to deny if you also were picking a gender to get specific drivers.

    • FlumPHP
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      -49 months ago

      Explain how sorting the list of available passengers by gender is discrimination? It’s being rolled out in huge metropolitan markets so there will be enough drivers for everyone to get one.

      • bou
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        49 months ago

        @flumph if they allowed sorting the list by race, instead of by gender… would you understand how it’s discrimination, then?

        • FlumPHP
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          19 months ago

          The protected category doesn’t matter, I don’t see how anyone is getting a leg up or being held back by the feature.

          • bou
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            29 months ago

            @flumph so, if there was a button that allowed drivers to prioritize white passengers, but there wasn’t one to prioritize black passengers, that wouldn’t be discriminatory to you?

        • FlumPHP
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          29 months ago

          The option allows customers to prioritize drivers…

          Nope, it doesn’t. The feature is for drivers, not passengers.

  • @ChrislyBear
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    419 months ago

    So as a driver I have now a filter for better rape and murder victims? Nice!

    • GhostalmediaOP
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      29 months ago

      I assume they’ll probably check with the gender people put on their drivers licenses or something.

        • @[email protected]
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          59 months ago

          On the rider side, women and nonbinary riders will see an option to “count me in” in their Lyft app. Choosing this will “increase their chances of matching with women and nonbinary drivers,” according to this blog post from Lyft.

          For drivers, the feature is based on the gender marker on their license on file, and for riders, on their gender setting within the app, explained CJ Macklin, senior communications manager at Lyft, in an email to The Verge. “Both riders and drivers will have the option to update their gender settings at any time to ensure it is reflective of their personal gender identity,” said Macklin.

          It’s opt-in on both sides.

          • @Hyzerflip
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            29 months ago

            Thank you, I clearly didn’t read the article.

        • GhostalmediaOP
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          29 months ago

          Yes, they can in. Non binary licenses are available in all 3 states that they’re piloting in. CA, AZ, and Il all have them.

    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      Would be better if driver meant rider here. Or if either rider or driver could disallow matching with male binary people (or whoever they find offensive)

  • @alienanimals
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    329 months ago

    Discrimination is never a good thing. Separate but “equal” is never a good thing.

    • @5BC2E7
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      109 months ago

      I guess that if I ever use lyft I would describe myself as whichever classification gives you more privilege. In this case I would go with non binary woman

  • @pixxelkick
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    9 months ago

    Step 0: Be the sort of scum that would assault a lyft driver
    Step 1: Set your identity to non binary as a rider
    Step 2: Dress in a way to appear non-binary, even a little bit. Honestly just painting your nails purple and wearing thick glasses is probably enough to not raise suspicion. Most people wont try and question this and interrogate you over it. If they do, filter them off and be a normal rider.
    Step 3: If they don’t question it, congrats, Lyft has no just done the work of assisting you with finding your next victim, great job Lyft!

    Bonus round~!

    1. Be a nazi
    2. Do steps 1-3 above
    3. Set your destination to be somewhere vaguely secluded where your fellow nazi friends are lying in wait.
    4. Congrats, Lyft has now successfully routed a non-binary identifying person directly into you and your nazi friend’s clutches, great job lyft!
    • snooggums
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      -29 months ago

      So people who haven’t been doing that already are going to suddenly go out of their way using steps that will show obvious intent during future prosecution?

      • @pixxelkick
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        39 months ago

        “Already” It’s a new feature, so no one is doing it already.

        • snooggums
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          29 months ago

          They haven’t been abusing drivers already.

          Yes, targeting could conceivably make it easier but it was already possible.

          • @pixxelkick
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            39 months ago

            targeting could conceivably make it easier but it was already possible.

            I agree…

            You understand this is the entire point of what I wrote though, right? That in an effort to try and make lyft safer, they have effectively done the exact opposite and literally made it easier for abusers to target victims.

  • snooggums
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    119 months ago

    Wow, this thread is a bunch of people spouting an updated version of the “men in women’s bathrooms is gonna lead to rape” bullshit.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    39 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Choosing this will “increase their chances of matching with women and nonbinary drivers,” according to this blog post from Lyft.

    If someone goes through the steps to change their gender in the app, we are going to assume that is how they identify,” Audrey Liu, Executive Vice President/Head of Design at Lyft, said in a statement.

    “Inclusivity is a core value at Lyft and we are committed to creating a community in which riders and drivers feel as though they are included and belong.”

    Lyft says this feature has been highly requested and will give women and nonbinary people more control over both the driving and riding experience.

    Currently, that demographic accounts for less than a quarter of Lyft drivers, which is comparable with the rest of the rideshare industry, according to a report by Gridwise.

    Those in launch cities can download the latest version of the Lyft app starting tomorrow, Sept. 13th to access the feature.


    The original article contains 478 words, the summary contains 157 words. Saved 67%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

    • @givesomefucks
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      29 months ago

      Yeah, this will end up just as well I’m assuming

  • @fsmacolyte
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    29 months ago

    John Wayne Gacy is really unhappy with this feature.

  • GhostalmediaOP
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    -149 months ago

    I look forward to seeing the same people suing over bathroom access doing the mental gymnastics to sue over this.