Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Uber allegedly used this button at least 24 times, from spring 2015 until late 2016. [27] [28] The existence of the kill switch was confirmed in documents leaked in 2022. [29] When Uber offices were raided by police or regulatory agencies, the "kill switch" of which was not used until the very moment, was used to cut access to the data systems ...
Sami's Law is a piece of federal legislation in the United States introduced by Representative Christopher Smith of New Jersey as H.R. 3262. [1] The bill was introduced in May 2019 and was signed into law on January 5, 2023 by President Joe Biden. [2]
BY ANN MERCOGLIANO, PIX11 BROOKLYN (PIX11) - Jaime Hessel told us about her ride from Williamsburg to Midtown back on On March 28th. "The guy didn't really know where he was going, and then his ...
Laurie Lam, chief brand officer at e.l.f. Beauty, said the DNA of the e.l.f. beauty brand and its disruptive spirit have remained unchanged over the past 20 years.
Uber Technologies Inc v Heller, 2020 SCC 16, is a 2020 decision of the Supreme Court of Canada. The Court held 8–1 that an arbitration clause in a contract the plaintiff David Heller had signed with Uber was unconscionable, and hence unenforceable. As a result, it held that Heller's proposed class action lawsuit against Uber could go forward.
Image source: Getty Images. Uber and Lyft both went public in 2019. At the time of this writing, Uber's stock trades 36% above its IPO price of $45, but Lyft's stock has tumbled more than 80% ...
Uber said that 90% of their 1.2 million drivers nationwide work less than 40 hours per week, with 80% working less than 20 hours per week, and that if they were required to classify drivers as employees, they would terminate 80% of their drivers because their nationwide business can only support 250,000 full-time jobs.
peripheral meal items (e.g. chips and candy) (Herbert L. Meiselman et al. 1994), but it is unknown whether this approach could affect more mindful choices about a primary meal. We introduce a convenience manipulation that plays on two biases that ordinarily promote high calorie intake, and use them instead to reduce intake.