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So rideshare means not sharing rides, but using your car to do stuff for your employer?
But wouldn't he at least reimburse you for the costs?
I believe these companies (Uber, Lyft, etc.) coined the term 'rideshare' primarily to skirt the taxi laws.
You see, they aren't technically running an unlicensed taxi business - no, no, no. When you use their app to say 'hey, I wish to go to the icecream shop on third', it lets all the other people with the app (and a car) know. If any of them happen to also be going to the icecream shop on third, they can let you know and the two of you can connect to share a ride there - isn't that nice!
These are in no way unlicensed taxis... That would be highly illegal and totally unfair to other taxi businesses that have to spend ungodly amounts of money to license their vehicles. It's just you and a stranger sharing a ride to go get some icecream...
Yes, it very much is the perversion of earlier coordinated communities that probably defined (and still earned) the name.
Here in Germany still exist "Mitfahrzentralen" which roughly translates to ride-share-centres, which allow people to offer ride-along places for specific private rides (e.g. driving from Munich to Berlin on Friday afternoon), for a share of the costs for the ride.
See also: AirBnB as unlicensed hotels
Yes, if your employer is uber. You’re not an employee. You’re sharing your asset. Like Airbnb is sharing your home.
Thanks, already learned from another commenter that ridesharing is apparently the term for the business model like Uber.
Confusing term.
I think the thing l was thinking of is actually named ''car pooling".