
‘Every eight minutes.'
That's how frequent Uber received a report of sexual assault or sexual misconduct in the US between 2017 and 2022, on average, according to a new investigation by The New York Times . That amounts to a staggering total of 400,181 Uber trips that involve reports of assault or misconduct. Uber's official number of 'serious sexual assault and misconduct' over that period is only 12,522; the company estimates that 75 percent of those 400,000 cases involve 'less serious' incidents of harassing comments or flirting. Still, Uber says its working on the problem, but anonymous employees say the company is ignoring promising solutions. Uber's Festering Sexual Assault Problem
[nytimes.com] Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates. Andrew J. Hawkins Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All by Andrew J. Hawkins
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Ride-sharing
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Transportation
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.
See All Uber

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
21 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Police are responding to a report of an active shooter on the campus of Emory University in Atlanta
Aerial footage shows police officers and paramedics responding to an active shooter situation at Emory University on Friday. The Atlanta campus alerted students and staff to avoid the area.
Yahoo
21 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Crypto bros say they organized dildo-throwing pranks at WNBA games to promote memecoin
A cryptocurrency group is taking credit for the rash of dildos being thrown at WNBA games, and their reasoning for doing so is as pathetic as you might expect. USA Today reported that whoever created Green Dildo Coin and the small community behind it in the few weeks since its inception have taken credit for organizing the obnoxious pranks. They reviewed multiple communications between its members ahead of the first incident, which took place on July 29. "Moving forward, we have a lot more pranks, but they're a lot lighter. They're a lot more tasteful," an anonymous spokesman for the group told the publication. "They're with a lot of different branded merch, and it's more or less to keep the dildo being spotted in different places that are high-traffic areas with cameras." Perhaps somewhat ironically, he also told USA Today that the memecoin was intended as a lighthearted protest against a "toxic" crypto environment. Yet the people involved seem to have little awareness, or empathy for, the fact that they're creating toxicity of their own in a community they would otherwise have nothing to do with. "We didn't do this because like we dislike women's sports or, like, some of the narratives that are trending right now are ridiculous," he's quoted as saying. "We know that in order to get a voice in the space ... we had to go out and do some viral stunts to save us from having to pay that influencer cabal, sacrifice our souls and the fate of the project." In other words, rather than make any sacrifices of their own, the people behind Green Dildo Coin thought it would be perfectly reasonable to go out and create a disturbance that affects others — people who are in the middle of professional games and the fans just trying to enjoy their time out. So far, two men have been arrested for throwing dildos at games, although the group claims that neither are associated with them. It's unclear why the group targeted WNBA games in particular, but even if there wasn't an underlying intention of disrespect (which seems debatable), that's still been the outcome. "It stops the game. Hijacks it, even," Lee Escobedo writes in The Guardian. "And reasserts the notion, violent and comical, that women's achievements exist on borrowed time within a culture still conditioned to belittle them." The Athletic noted that members of the cryptocurrency group who participated in a livestream during one of the games where a dildo was thrown spent time mocking the WNBA and its attendees. And repeated requests from within the league to stop throwing the dildos have, so far, gone ignored. As one X user put it, "Damn can't believe the memecoin community would be behind an unfunny and contrived bit." This article originally appeared on Pride: Crypto bros say they organized dildo-throwing pranks at WNBA games to promote memecoin RELATED Flying sex toys keep interrupting WNBA games and players are calling foul The sex toy prank at WNBA games isn't funny — it's sexist Listen up WNBA fans, players are fed up with sex toy bit, so can you please keep it in your pants?


Washington Post
21 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Former diplomat arrested, charged with sexually abusing children in D.C.
A former diplomat who worked as a World Bank consultant and volunteered as team photographer for a D.C. youth swim team has been charged with sexually abusing three children — all of whom lived in a Northwest Washington neighborhood near him, his wife and their three young sons. Thomas Mahony, 42, an Australian national, was arrested last month and accused of sexually abusing two 7-year-old girls and one 8-year-old boy. The arrest has shocked the D.C. youth swimming community, where he was known as a proud father who regularly volunteered to time races or take team photos. Two of the swim teams Mahony had volunteered with, All Star Aquatics and MVP Dolphins, sent emails to families asking them to contact police with additional information.