"What's my name?Watch Millae: Good Brother Online"
That's the question the family of Samantha Josephson is making sure everyone asks after getting into a ride-share car.
Josephson, 21, was killed last month after getting into what she thought was the Uber she had ordered in downtown Columbia, South Carolina, where she went to college. Her accused killer impersonated an Uber driver.
SEE ALSO: You’ve just been harassed in an Uber or Lyft. Here’s what you can do.Now the #WhatsMyName hashtag is spreading -- with the help of her family -- to make sure more riders safely get home. A website, a growing social presence, and media appearances are all efforts to educate passengers on how to find the correct Uber or Lyft after ordering a car through an app.
The movement, which is separate from safety campaigns from ride-sharing companies like Uber and Lyft, wants to get riders in the habit of double-checking that their driver is really their driver. The movement believes something as simple as asking, "What's my name?" can ensure you're in a verified Uber car, with a driver who's background-checked and licensed. If the name the driver has on their app isn't yours, something's wrong.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
It's not all on the riders. The movement led by Josephson's family focuses on rider education, but that doesn't mean that the onus should be only on riders -- and especially female riders. Ride-sharing safety education, other prevention methods, and ride-hailing app confirmation tools should be brought in from the companies connecting the rides rather than making women like Josephson bear the responsibility of avoiding assault and violence.
Ride-share companies are re-examining the driver-passenger matching process. Already Uber and Lyft emphasize license-plate matching as a base-level safety precaution, but other tools like Uber's glowing Beacon and Lyft's Amp are supposed to help match drivers and riders.
Beacon displays sit in the front of Uber windshields and pulsate a color chosen and controlled by the passenger in the app. When your Uber ride pulls up, the color should match. Lyft's Amp beacons on the driver dash also flash matching colors and show the passenger name -- so again, if it's not your name, it's not your ride. Lyft says hundreds of thousands of drivers across the U.S. use the Amp devices.
Uber's safety page says, "Check your ride, every time." And starting Thursday, more awareness about checking your ride will be pushed out to riders across the U.S. Every Uber user will receive an email with a set of steps to complete before getting into an Uber. The campaign will go out across social media, ads in college newspapers, and on billboards.
In the app, a push notification will remind riders about checking ride details -- just before a car arrives. The alert will first go out in Columbia, South Carolina, and then nationwide in the following days. Also in the app a banner will remind you to confirm you're matched with the right car. The reminder will stay up for several weeks.
Uber's also giving a $100,000 grant to the International Association of Campus Law Enforcement Administrators to spread the message about checking for ride confirmation.
Lawmakers in South Carolina, where Josephson was killed, introduced a bill pushing for a new ride-sharing requirement. Cars would have to have lights and signs that match to passenger apps. North Carolina has similar legislation. A Lyft spokesperson said in a statement that the company was willing to work with lawmakers on adding more signage to cars.
"We want to work with lawmakers to develop common sense rules to keep our community safe. The best way for riders to identify their Lyft is to match the license plate number shown in the app with the license plate of the vehicle they're about to get into ... A measure that can add another layer of safety is illuminated signage for every rideshare vehicle," the statement read.
As is, not every Uber or Lyft car has these colorful, more obvious driver-passenger matching tools. Other ride-sharing companies offer their own verification tools and systems to make sure everyone gets matched up properly.
A Change.org petition with more than 230,000 signatures is calling for QR codes for passengers to scan through the ride-hailing apps before they get into a car. This is something carpooling ride app Via has been testing, as seen with Viavan with Mercedes-Benz vans. A QR scanner for passengers to use as a "boarding pass" from their smartphone is supposed to launch in a few weeks.
Another matching technology in the works is using augmented reality with a Via icon "floating" above the correct car you've been matched with. If the arrow or icon doesn't appear, it means your car isn't there yet.
Didi Chuxing -- a major ride-sharing company in China -- shares the driver's profile picture, vehicle information, and license plates on the app, and sends an in-app message to remind the rider to check that all information matches.
Didi says it connects riders to online customer service, a phone or email hotline to report a mismatch between the driver and their car -- if the driver is not in the car listed in the profile, Didi says it will suspend the driver.
Riders in India taking Ola cars have had to match codes generated in the app for the passenger and driver to make sure they've been properly paired.
Uber has quickly beefed up its rider safety reminders and messaging after Josephson's death. But until more of these verification systems become commonplace across ride-sharing platforms, riders still carry the burden to stay safe while ride-sharing.
Topics Social Good Uber lyft
The Real Scandal in AcademiaBest Black Friday robot vacuum deals 2023Bumble's State of the Union reports a 'reality gap' about gender equalityThree DaysWhite Supremacy and the Dangerous Discourse of Liberal ToleranceBumble's State of the Union reports a 'reality gap' about gender equalityHere for the Ride: Andre D. Wagner’s Subway PhotographsBlack Friday Nintendo Switch deals 2023: The 'Mario Kart 8 Deluxe' bundle is back'One's gotta go' and Microsoft Edge: The 7 funniest tweets of the weekWatching Screwball Comedies with Harry MathewsA ‘Walden’ for the YouTube AgeBlack Friday Nintendo Switch deals 2023: The 'Mario Kart 8 Deluxe' bundle is backGabriel García Márquez’s Road Trip Through Alabama by Caleb JohnsonHow Do You Judge Je Ne Sais Quoi?Shane Madej and Ryan Bergara tell us what's in their YouTube watch historyPortrait of a FriendshipI tried the revived KFC Double Down and lived to tell the tale33 Best Black Friday deals under $50Sugimoto's Portraits Bring the Dead Back to LifeA DACA Poet Speaks Out Pitbull and Jeb Bush are apparently trying to buy an MLB team together Little girl's reaction to the 'Frozen' ride is hilariously cute Twitter hires a former Goldman Sachs banker to serve as CFO White Walkers invade the streets of London ahead of next 'Game of Thrones' The best headphone deals from Amazon Prime Day So a bunch of Twitter users actually sued Trump for blocking them Viral CEO further explains why Mental Health Days are so important Andy Murray helpfully reminds reporter that, yes, female tennis players do exist Watch Tesla rival Lucid Air reach 235 mph in a speed test At last, I've learned to stop apologising for the tone of my emails Massive Verizon data breach exposes up to 14 million accounts Beachgoers form human chain to save 9 people from drowning Emmys 2017: Full list of nominations KFC is selling space junk shaped like a chicken sandwich Watch a Delaware Fertility app: Android users want to get pregnant, iPhone users don't Developers sued over alleged 'League of Legends' knock Brace yourself: More ads are coming to Facebook Messenger Google Earth's Voyager tool could be the next great social network Apple's ARKit will make walking and texting the warmup for the real distracted disasters
2.4943s , 10157.2578125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Millae: Good Brother Online】,New Knowledge Information Network