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China's Didi 'most valuable Asian start-up'; Uber exec demoted
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) April 28, 2017


Uber demotes exec at center of self-driving tech lawsuit
San Francisco (AFP) April 28, 2017 - Uber has demoted an executive heading its self-driving car operations who has been at the center of a lawsuit filed by Alphabet's Waymo accusing the ride-sharing giant of theft.

An Uber spokesman on Thursday confirmed media reports that Anthony Levandowski would step down from his role.

According to an email cited in media reports, Levandowski indicated he would "be recused" from work on autonomous driving "through the remainder of the Waymo litigation" but would keep other responsibilities at Uber.

Alphabet contends that Levandowski, who had been a manager at its autonomous car subsidiary Waymo, took technical data with him when he left to launch a competing venture that went on to become Otto, Uber's self-driving vehicle unit.

Levandowski was an engineer for the unit known at the time as Google Car, working on LiDAR, the remote sensing technology that is critical for autonomous vehicles.

In his email, Levandowski stated, "We should all be proud that our self-driving technology has been built independently, from the ground up."

But he said his move could help "keep the team focused on achieving the vision that brought us all here."

Waymo's lawsuit contends that Levandowski downloaded more than 14,000 proprietary files from a highly confidential design server to a laptop in December 2015.

If Alphabet prevails in the lawsuit, it could deal a blow to Uber, which has been rocked by a series of embarrassing disclosures about a culture of sexism, cut-throat workplace tactics and covert use of law enforcement-evading software for its ridesharing operations.

China's ride-hailing leader Didi Chuxing said Friday it had raised more than $5.5 billion in new financing amid reports that the fund injection makes it the most valuable start-up in Asia with a worth over $50 billion.

Beijing based-Didi, which claims nearly 90 percent of China's ride-hailing market after buying rival Uber's assets in the country last year, said it would use the money to "support its global strategy and continued investments in AI-based technologies."

Didi's valuation makes it tops in Asia and number two in the world after Uber's $68 billion, according to rankings by The Wall Street Journal.

The fresh funding moves Didi past Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi, which was at $46 billion.

The Wall Street Journal's rankings were based on companies "that are privately held, have raised money in the past four years and have at least one venture-capital firm as an investor."

Didi's statement did not give details on who provided the fresh funds, but Bloomberg News, quoting people familiar with the situation, said the investors include Japan's SoftBank Group, China Merchants Bank, and an arm of China's Bank of Communications.

Didi already lists among its investors Apple and Chinese internet titans Alibaba and Tencent.

China legalised ride-hailing services in July last year and is the world's largest market, fuelled by hundreds of millions of mobile-savvy Chinese millennials.

But Didi, which has operations in over 400 Chinese cities, has hit obstacles including driving restrictions and licensing requirements in major cities like Beijing and Shanghai that have crimped its outlook.

It is hoping that driverless technology can help overcome such hurdles, and last month opened an artificial intelligence lab in Silicon Valley.

"Didi is working towards systemic breakthroughs in intelligent driving technologies and smart transportation architecture," the company said.

"With this new investment, DiDi will continue to work with communities and partners around the world to provide more innovative mobility services, and to expand smart urban transportation programs as part of its efforts to build an efficient and sustainable global mobility ecosystem."

Didi, which completes 20 million rides daily, has sought to expand overseas with an investment into Southeast Asian taxi-booking app Grab last year, following closely on the heels of a tie-up with Uber's US rival Lyft.

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Rideshare rivals Gett, Juno join forces
Washington (AFP) April 26, 2017
US-based ridesharing startups Gett and Juno announced Wednesday they were joining forces, helping them step up a challenge to larger rivals Uber and Lyft. "Excited to share that #Gett & @juno join forces in the US bringing together two companies that treat drivers better," said a tweet from New York-based Gett, which operates in 100 cities in the US, Russia, Britain and Israel. The compa ... read more

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