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Friday, November 22, 2024

FTC hits Lyft with $2.1M penalty for luring drivers with false earnings claims


Lyft has agreed to a $2.1 million settlement proposed by the FTC over the car-hailing firm’s “misleading earnings claims about how a lot cash drivers might count on to make.”

As documented within the FTC’s grievance doc, Lyft systematically inflated the incomes it marketed to drivers it was trying to recruit in 2021 and 2022. As an example, in LA it recommended drivers could be supplied as much as $43 per hour. “Lyft didn’t disclose that these quantities didn’t characterize the revenue a mean driver might count on to earn, however as a substitute have been based mostly on the earnings of the highest one-fifth of drivers,” and the distinction was as much as 30%.

“Lyft claimed that Drivers in New Jersey might earn as much as $34 per hour when Lyft’s personal calculations put the median earnings at solely $25 per hour. In the identical month, Lyft claimed that Drivers in Boston might earn as much as $42 per hour when median earnings have been simply $33 per hour,” the FTC wrote within the grievance.

Not solely that, however the marketed hourly charges have been inclusive of customer-provided ideas, whereas implying to any regular reader that it was a base fee. So the efficient fee was seemingly $5 to $10 decrease even than the unspoken common.

It additionally made deceptive guarantees about promotions and incentives, based on the FTC.

“For instance, one assure promised drivers they’d make $975 in the event that they accomplished 45 rides in a weekend. However these ensures didn’t clearly disclose that drivers have been solely paid the distinction between what they really earned, and Lyft’s marketed assured quantity,” the FTC stated in its press launch.

Whereas this was clear within the positive print, the language used was deceptive, and Lyft obtained 1000’s of complaints from its drivers — a gaggle that, the FTC factors out, consists disproportionately of individuals for whom English just isn’t their native language.

The FTC warned Lyft in October 2021 that its practices have been unlawful, and it should cease — but it surely continued them, and the result’s this order and penalty.

After all, $2.1 million is a drop within the bucket for Lyft, one of many two globally dominant ride-hailing platforms. However the firm has already needed to form up its fee guarantees: It may possibly’t embody ideas in its estimates of hourly charges, for example, and it should extra clearly clarify promotions like “assured” revenue.

Notably, two FTC Commissioners dissented from the choice, saying that the company was overstepping in pursuing the “earn as much as” language as deceptive. However Commissioner Ferguson’s argument, whereas coherent, quantities to “shoppers know that advertisers exaggerate and lie” and wouldn’t take the “earn as much as” quantity as consultant of anticipated earnings. Maybe extra convincingly, they argue that Lyft wasn’t adequately notified it was breaking the legislation.

“Nor are employees protected when the Fee claims victory on doubtful authorized theories because it settles complaints for pennies on the greenback with companies which might be pleased to pay the Fee to go away,” writes Ferguson — a good level.

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