2020年4月21日 星期二

On Tech: The downsides of cheap Uber rides

An economic and health crisis is exposing how vulnerable Uber workers really are.

The downsides of cheap Uber rides

Jan Robert Dünnweller

Many of us have benefited from the convenience of services like Uber and Instacart. But now in an economic and health crisis, their workers are highly vulnerable, and no one has their backs.

Here’s how this happened, and who is to blame. Short version: Blame everyone, including ourselves.

How we got here:

In the United States, people who drive or deliver for Uber — and for companies like Lyft, Postmates, DoorDash and more — are hired as contractors not employees. That means the companies aren’t required to provide them benefits and protections like health insurance and a minimum wage.

Some people who work for these companies like the flexibility of contract work. But the lack of health insurance, sick pay and other protections for many Americans, including Uber contractors, is stark now.

More people are skipping Uber rides altogether, leaving drivers with little income. And contractors are exposed to health risks when they do drive for Uber or go grocery shopping for Instacart.

Blame Uber:

For years, Uber and its peers delayed a reckoning about its contract work force, which numbers in the millions.

Only recently, as lawsuits and laws questioned whether Uber workers are actually conventional employees, the company and others have stepped up their push for a “third way” to give workers some flexibility of contractor life with some employee-like protections.

Uber also is paying drivers and delivery couriers who can prove they’re probably sick and are ordered to isolate themselves. It’s not clear how many people are eligible for a payment or have received one.

The company also asked for a temporary legal break so it could offer some worker benefits, without those facts being used against it in court cases seeking to reclassify Uber workers as employees. That’s an understandable step to protect Uber’s business. It’s also gross.

Blame ourselves, and our government:

I started writing this pointing the finger at Uber and other companies that summon contract workers at the tap of a smartphone app. It’s not that simple, though.

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And Uber is far from the only company relying on non-employee workers, in part because it’s cheaper to hire and fire them. That exposes the downsides of government decisions in the United States to tie many basic protections to our employer.

I’m not sure companies like Uber can continue to rely on an all-contract work force. That’s going to be a huge challenge for Uber. It’s also a problem for all of us who enjoyed cheap, handy services that leave workers exposed.

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Tech tip

How do we block out (lovely) kids’ voices?

A reader, Caroline Ayres, recently asked us for advice on blocking out noise while she’s working from home:

I love my family, but with two teenagers, a dog, a cat and a preschool for kids of emergency providers in the downstairs of my building, working from home is a bit of a challenge during coronavirus. My question is: What noise-canceling headphones do I need to buy?

Lauren Dragan from the Wirecutter, a product recommendation site owned by The Times, shared this advice:

Hi, Caroline! The first thing you should know is that noise-canceling headphones — while fantastic for low frequency, sustained sounds like airplane noise — aren’t effective on human voices, dog barks or other high-pitched sounds.

What blocks those sounds out is a physical barrier to the sound waves, often referred to as “passive isolation.” While some noise-canceling headphones, like the Bose NC 700 or Jabra Elite 85h, also have decent passive isolation, they’re often expensive.

The best way to block out kiddo shenanigans is to use isolating earbuds. Nearly any earbud you love (that fits securely) can be upgraded to better block sounds by adding sound isolating foam tips.

If you don’t have earbuds already, we’d suggest the Jabra Elite 75t, as they work well for video calls. Or if you want something more affordable, the 1 More Piston Fit BT are a great option.

Another tip is to use white noise (or ocean or rain sounds) via an app to help mask the sound around you. Just be sure to keep your laptop volume below 60 percent to protect your ears.

A final resort, and I’m only half-joking, is to buy wireless earbuds and wear hearing-protection earmuffs over them. Not the most comfortable setup, but man, it’s effective. Trust me. I have a 4-year-old.

Before we go …

  • The iPad is the gadget of the pandemic. Brian X. Chen, the personal tech columnist for The Times, writes that the iPad has transformed from an “other” device to a go-to screen for video calls, cooking tutorials and distraction-free emailing (with an add-on keyboard).
  • Policing Facebook ain’t easy, example infinity. The company says posts encouraging protests against states’ pandemic lockdown rules are fine, as long as the protesters abide by states’ pandemic lockdown rules, Bloomberg News reported. Drawing the line between free speech and protecting public safety can lead to head-scratching rule-making.
  • Competitive. Marble. Racing. Watching YouTube videos of marbles steamrolling down tracks or negotiating hurdles (!) is a balm in the absence of human sports, as my colleague Mariel Padilla writes. There are even play-by-play announcers, marble “fans” and a cappella team chants.

Hugs to this

Is it bad that I feel jealous of the pizza groundhog? Just munching without a care in the world.

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2020年4月20日 星期一

On Tech: Take YouTube’s Dangers Seriously

The website's features can lead people unwittingly to scary places.

Take YouTube’s Dangers Seriously

Timo Lenzen

My colleague Kevin Roose excels at explaining how our behavior is shaped by the companies behind our favorite online hangouts.

In the first episode of Kevin’s new audio series, called “Rabbit Hole,” he tells us how Caleb Cain, a college dropout in West Virginia, found himself watching ever more extreme YouTube videos. Caleb said he started to believe the racism, misogyny and conspiracy theories he absorbed.

People believe in fringe ideas for complex reasons. But Kevin points some blame at YouTube and its feature that recommends one video after another. This can push people from relatively mainstream videos toward dangerous ideas.

Our conversation about this, and more:

Aren’t most of us on YouTube for cooking videos and kittens, not conspiracies?

Kevin: People watch more than a billion hours of YouTube videos daily. While we can’t know how much of that is disturbing or dangerous, it’s inevitably a huge amount. And for a long time, people like Alex Jones and propaganda networks like RT had millions of subscribers and hundreds of millions of views.

How much blame does YouTube deserve for people like Caleb developing extreme views?

It’s a hard question. When someone gets drawn into an extremist rabbit hole on YouTube, it’s often because of loneliness, economic conditions and the “alternative influence network” of people who spread these ideas by, essentially, being good at YouTube.

But YouTube bears responsibility. Part of what makes YouTube seductive — and successful as a business! — are its automated recommendations, and its function that starts playing the next video after you finish one. That software plays a huge role in what people watch.

If someone goes to a library, checks out “Mein Kampf” and becomes a neo-Nazi, that’s not the library’s fault. If there’s a robot librarian who greets them at the front door, steers them to the German history section and puts “Mein Kampf” in front of them. …

Oof. Do you think it would help if YouTube turned off video recommendations?

I do.

What do we collectively do?

We need to decrease the influence these platforms have over us. For me, removing automated features — turning off autoplay on YouTube, making my own Spotify playlists, making it so Alexa doesn’t automatically choose the dog food brand I buy — helps me feel more in control.

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And we journalists at big news organizations can help by figuring out how to make true, factual information as appealing to people on YouTube as conspiracy theories.

When people who are radicalized online commit crimes, or Alexa leads us to buy a certain pet food, are these our choices? Or is the internet warping us?

Both! The French researcher Camille Roth writes that the algorithms powering websites like YouTube and Facebook come in two flavors: “read our minds” and “change our minds.” If we’re aware of the machines working on us, and feel the ways they’re steering our choices, we can decide whether we want to follow a recommendation or make a different decision.

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Tip of the week

That’s probably not the W.H.O. contacting you

Brian X. Chen, our personal tech columnist, offers this guidance on digital scams:

Even in a pandemic, scammers are still trying to get your money. Fraudsters are posing as the World Health Organization.

The scams mostly involve messages sent by email or WhatsApp that request personal information or donations, according to a warning recently posted online by the W.H.O. Some messages try to trick people into clicking on malicious links or downloading files; this can reveal passwords or compromise our devices.

What to do? Don’t click on links or open files sent to you from unknown sources. If you spot one of these scams, the W.H.O. suggests reporting it on its website.

For reliable information about the coronavirus, visit the W.H.O. website and continue reading coverage from The New York Times and other trusted news outlets.

Before we go …

  • “A new way of life conducted amid an unseen alien intelligence.” This story in The Atlantic is a terrific explanation of how Facebook’s data-collection and advertising systems work. And as Kevin discussed about YouTube, Facebook’s automated systems are shaping people’s behaviors in ways even the company can’t predict.
  • Dividing people, with ulterior motives: The protests against state shelter-in-place orders are being coordinated by a handful of provocateurs on Facebook, The Washington Post reported. Charlie Warzel, the Times Opinion writer, said the coronavirus is a perfect subject for online opportunists who “instill a deep distrust in all authority, while promoting a seductive, conspiratorial alternate reality.”
  • Signs of trouble long before Zoombombing: Zoom, the suddenly popular video-calling app, says it was caught off guard by trolls breaking into people’s meetings and by newly identified security flaws. But years ago, some businesses that used Zoom flagged these risks and tried to get the company to fix them, my colleagues Natasha Singer and Nicole Perlroth report.

Hugs to this

“I hate this house!!” Oh yes, we are all this cranky child.

We want to hear from you. Tell us what you think of this newsletter and what else you’d like us to explore. You can reach us at ontech@nytimes.com.

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