Cab aggregator Uber, is travelling across places to ensure regulators that the company is changing the way it does business. A string of controversies cropped up over the last couple of months, showing distrust in both users and sponsors.
To make matters worse, a host of top executives and Uber employees have left Uber in light of all the bad press surrounding the company. Despite Uber rising so quickly, several complaints surround the cab aggregator, the most serious one being harassment of riders by the drivers.
Authorities in major cities where Uber operates, especially in the United States and Britain, said they will seriously look into the matter and get the problem fixed as soon as possible. In an attempt to right all the wrongs, Uber also removed its Chief Executive Head, Travis Kalanick, in June this year.
Brooks Entwistle, the Chief Business Officer For Asia Pacific, Uber Technologies Inc., said, “We’ve learned very quickly and we’re tacking very quickly (sic). We have changed tracks in so many ways in dealing with regulators, dealing with governments.”
These comments come on the heels of Uber’s disclosure last week that it covered up a 2016 data breach which compromised the data of some 57 million customers and drivers, prompting governments around the world to launch probes into the breach and Uber’s response to the matter. This move comes as a refreshing change of pace for Uber’s arrogant approach to a world which is slowly losing faith in this particular aggregator.