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Uber’s robotaxi lobbying effort puts it on a collision course with Waymo

A proposed bill that would allow autonomous vehicles to operate in Washington, D.C. has become a test case for Uber’s broader robotaxi strategy. Instead of simply partnering with, and investing in, robotaxi developers, Uber is also trying to shape the rules that govern them, an effort that puts it in direct opposition with its business partner, Waymo.

Uber, which opposes the bill, argues the proposed rule would displace for-hire human drivers and hand Waymo a de facto monopoly. It has lobbied instead for a system that would require robotaxis to operate on a ride-hailing network that also uses human drivers, according to public records viewed by TechCrunch and interviews with industry and company sources. 

“We have already seen in other jurisdictions how a flawed, first-party only regulatory approach can disrupt a city,” Javi Correoso, who leads U.S. policy and federal affairs for Uber, said in May during a D.C. Council roundtable on a separate, existing statute regulating for-hire drivers. Correoso argued at the time that robotaxis create congestion by idling or cruising empty, cannot provide the kind of physical assistance to older or disabled adults that human drivers can, and cited data that states one AV displaces roughly four drivers.

When asked about the hybrid model, Correoso shared Uber’s regulatory vision. 

“Hybrid model means that consumers should have the ability to access both. If a consumer is on the app, they should be able to choose,” he said, according to a publicly available recording and transcript. “I would go a step further: I think it should be part of the regulatory framework for the industry. There should be a requirement for consumers to be able to take an Uber that’s driven by a human.”

Alphabet-owned Waymo contends the bill, which it backs, will allow for the safe deployment of autonomous vehicles while supporting public transit, equitable access, and workers without restricting companies like Uber. 

The two companies will pitch their positions on Monday during a day-long hearing. The bill’s passage is not imminent — many parties told TechCrunch they hope legislation is approved before the end of the year, and before Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser leaves office in January. Still, the arguments and lobbying efforts surrounding the bill reflect a broader debate that stretches beyond Washington, D.C.

The proposed AV bill

The bill, which was introduced by Councilmember Charles Allen in May, would update the existing Autonomous Vehicle Act of 2012 to allow for driverless testing and commercial driverless operations within the district. Today, companies like Waymo and Zoox can test autonomous vehicles, but only with a human safety operator behind the wheel.

The proposed bill would give the District Department of Transportation (DDOT) the authority to issue driverless testing and deployment permits to AV developers that meet certain requirements. Such requirements include holding a minimum of $5 million in liability insurance, and agreeing to report crash data within either eight hours or 72 hours, depending on whether the vehicle is part of a commercial fleet or a privately owned AV (which doesn’t yet exist in the market).

The bill would also charge robotaxi operators a $0.15 per mile tax, a proposal that robotaxi advocates have argued is too expensive. Revenue from the “vehicles miles traveled” (VMT) tax would be split, with 50% going toward public transit and the remaining used to support education and workforce development for rideshare and taxi drivers at risk of losing their jobs to robot cars.

Other financial requirements, which some argue would block all but the biggest players from the DC market, include a $1 million fee to apply for the application and a non-refundable $5 million fee for the permit, once approved.

Uber and Waymo are not the only parties interested in the bill. Numerous organizations and companies, including representatives from Tesla, Lyft, the Teamsters and Service Employees International Union labor unions, disability rights and accessibility advocacy groups, local business and industry groups, highway safety proponents, government officials, and think tanks are all scheduled to speak during Monday’s hearing. 

The bill has even prompted an anti-robotaxi campaign, launched by a New York-based organization called Coalition for Accountability and Road Safety, which is canvassing voters and posting on social media.

It’s unclear who is funding the organization, which is registered to an employee of Pitta Bishop & Del Giorno LLC, a New York lobbying and government affairs outfit affiliated with labor and employment law firm Pitta LLP. According to publicly available lobbying documents listed by the city, Pitta has been retained over the past year by several labor unions and the New York Black Car Operators’ Injury Compensation Fund. 

The stakes are high for all robotaxi developers, human drivers, and the ride-hailing and taxi companies that employ them in D.C. It’s arguably elevated for Uber and Waymo too, given their considerable market positions. Uber is the largest ride-hailing and delivery network in the United States, and Waymo is the largest robotaxi operator, providing more than 500,000 rides each week across 11 cities. 

If Uber is successful and its hybrid network idea is adopted in D.C. — or elsewhere — it would leave AV developers like Waymo with two choices: put their robotaxis on ride-hailing apps like Uber’s, or employ human drivers who provide ride-hailing services alongside the robot cars that have taken years and hundreds of millions of dollars to develop.

If Waymo and other supporters of the D.C. bill are successful, Uber argues it will be pushed out altogether.

Protect and expand

Lucid robotaxi with Lucid/Nuro/Uber branding
Image Credits:Uber/Lucid/Nuro

The bill is a local policy fight, but it also highlights one prong of Uber’s strategy to protect its leading position in the ride-hailing and delivery market. 

Uber is actively investing in and partnering with autonomous vehicle technology companies — more than 30 globally — while also building AV Labs, a new business unit designed to collect and share real-world driving data with AV developers. The company is hiring dozens of engineers for the division, according to job listings and interviews with sources familiar with the effort. 

While Uber stakes its claim in the AV market, it is also championing protective policies that would require autonomous vehicles to operate alongside human drivers within a single platform — much like the Uber app. 

Uber’s investment and partnership activity has been underway for several years. The company’s push for a hybrid network is recent, first emerging in a white paper published in May. Since then, Uber has ramped up its rhetoric with policymakers, including the D.C. Council roundtable meeting in May to discuss updates to the district’s Vehicle-for-Hire Innovation Amendment Act of 2014. (That law, which regulates ride-hailing and taxi services through the Department of For-Hire Vehicles, is separate from the AV bill, but multiple sources told TechCrunch that the policies overlap.)

Uber submitted a letter to the D.C. Council in June, which TechCrunch has seen, elaborating on Uber’s policy chief Correoso’s earlier comments. The letter stated the hybrid approach would be a single transportation network with traditional drivers that gradually incorporates autonomous vehicles.

“What this means in practice is that if you call an Uber in a market with AVs, you might get matched with an AV or a human driver, depending on the nature of your trip,” the letter reads. 

In D.C., Uber is responding to a bill that would effectively ban hybrid networks altogether, company spokesperson Noah Edwardsen told TechCrunch. 

Waymo disputes that interpretation, and a representative for the company said Waymo does not support efforts to limit AVs to specific types of networks. “We would welcome changes clarifying that different types of networks can operate in the District,” Waymo spokesperson Ethan Teicher wrote in an emailed statement sent to TechCrunch.

More broadly, Edwardsen said Uber has never taken a one-size-fits-all approach to policy, contrasting it to “advocacy from parts of the AV industry today, where proposals have repeatedly failed to address important issues like labor and transportation equity — or that have tried to cynically lock out competitors and create monopolies — making them largely unworkable.”

While numerous industry insiders have criticized aspects of the D.C. bill — notably the VMT tax and proposed cap on robotaxis — some disagree with Uber’s hybrid proposal. 

Greg Rogers, founder and executive director of the nonprofit mobility and tech think tank The Innovation Majority, is scheduled to speak at Monday’s hearing, and he called Uber’s move an attempt at “regulatory capture.”

“Mobility is already a marketplace — people already can make choices on whether to take a bus, or ride a bike, or walk, or take rideshare every day,” Rogers told TechCrunch in an interview. “And any argument that you can improve consumer welfare by forcing certain business models and canceling out others does not improve people’s mobility choices. It does not improve road safety, and what it risks is only further entrenching interests and charging rent on anyone who seeks to operate AVs in the district.”

Uber’s pro-driver, ”let’s compromise” positioning may surprise close followers of the ride-hailing company. The company’s early history was painted by an anti-regulation ethos that sought out loopholes within existing laws, or ignored them altogether.

Uber often opposed union-supported regulations, like AB 5 in California, which would have disrupted its asset-light business model by classifying gig workers as employees. Proposition 22, a 2020 ballot initiative passed by voters and upheld by the California Supreme Court, was backed by Uber, Lyft, and others as a compromise that gave workers access to health insurance and other benefits while maintaining their contractor status.

Those fights, and others like it, have taught Uber that it has to consider human workers, and the power of labor unions that support them, if it wants to play a central role in the robotaxi market, according to sources. Uber’s own chief operating officer Andrew Macdonald struck a similar we-learned-our-lesson tone in a LinkedIn post in May that promoted its white paper.

Macdonald noted that the consequences of the company’s grow-at-all-costs approach led to “regulatory battles and a corporate crisis that damaged trust for years. “

“That experience changed us,” he wrote. “Today, we partner with cities instead of confronting them.”

Uber argues its hybrid network proposal is that compromise — one that allows robotaxis and human drivers to coexist on the same platform while easing labor concerns.

The company is committed to pitching the idea in other cities and states as lawmakers develop new AV laws or update existing ones.

Wired published its own report detailing lobbying efforts in New Jersey and D.C.

Uber’s stance, and its active lobbying, puts it on a collision course with Waymo. 

Frenemies

Waymo on Uber
Image Credits:Waymo/Uber

Waymo and Uber have squared off over autonomous vehicle technology before.

In 2017, Waymo sued Uber over allegations of trade secret theft. The high-profile trial, in which Waymo accused Uber of using trade secrets downloaded by former Google engineer Anthony Levandowski, delivered memorable testimony and evidence, including phrases like “laser is the sauce.” The trial lasted just five days before Uber agreed to settle, and the two companies stopped sparring, at least publicly.

Six years later, with Uber’s in-house AV development program sold off to Aurora, the former courtroom rivals teamed up. Waymo agreed to put its self-driving vehicles on Uber’s app in Phoenix in 2023. That partnership, which quietly ended in May, has been described as limited and as a “pilot.” Waymo also operates its own stand-alone app in Phoenix, its first robotaxi market.

The relationship seemed to solidify by March 2025, when company executives — grasping mugs of prickly pear margaritas and plates of Terry Black’s barbecue at a private party — celebrated the launch of Waymo robotaxis on the Uber app in Austin during the annual music, film, and tech fest, SXSW. The partnership soon expanded to Atlanta. In both of those cities, prospective customers cannot hail a robotaxi directly through Waymo’s app, and have to use the Uber app and hope for a match.

In recent months, the relationship has soured — and publicly.

Earlier this year, Uber chief technology officer Praveen Neppalli openly criticized Waymo on X, posting a video and commentary calling out the unsafe and “scary” behavior of a Waymo robotaxi. During an earnings call in May, Uber chief executive Dara Khosrowshahi directed comments toward Waymo without directly naming the company when he expressed support for regulators.

“They’re asking the right questions, which is how are AVs going to interact with — in situations where the power goes out or interacting in school zones or working with firefighters, etc. in the city,” said Khosrowshahi, referring to recent incidents that involved Waymo robotaxis. 

The tension between Waymo and Uber has even gone global, with both companies poised for a looming showdown in London.

As speculation swirls over when Uber and Waymo’s existing partnerships in Austin or Atlanta will implode, both companies are gearing up for a regulatory fight that appears poised to spill into other cities and states.

Uber is betting, and lobbying for, a different future than the one Waymo envisions.

“We think the future of our transportation system will be hybrid,” Uber’s head of AV policy Harry Hartfield said in testimony submitted ahead of Monday’s meeting. “Public policy should be designed around that reality, not around an AV-only future that does not exist.”

The article was updated to include more detail on permitting fees.

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OpenAI’s new flagship model deletes files on its own, people keep warning

Users of OpenAI’s latest coding and cybersecurity-oriented flagship model, GPT-5.6 Sol, are posting horrifying accounts on social media, claiming the model just up and deleted their files, data, even entire databases on its own, without asking first.

“GPT-5.6-Sol just accidentally deleted almost ALL of my Mac’s files,” wrote Matt Shumer, the founder and CEO of AI startup OthersideAI, maker of HyperWrite, in a now viral post on X.

“GPT-5.6 Sol just deleted my whole production database. That’s it. Not a joke. This had never happened to me before, with any other model, ever,” developer Bruno Lemos posted on X.

“Looks like I’ve gotten bit by Codex Sol’s overly ambitious system and it deleted some files it shouldn’t have. I have backups so I’ll be fine, but this is not cool, Sol needs to be toned down,” posted developer Joey Kudish.

A Reddit post has collected more examples.

True, a handful of users making such claims — even one as credible as Shumer — isn’t statistically reliable evidence that the model is solely at fault. Plenty of other variables can cause an AI system to misbehave.

But OpenAI itself flagged this risk before Sol ever shipped. Two weeks before OpenAI released GPT-5.6 Sol, the company published a system card for the model — the paper that documents model-testing methods and results. Naturally, the system card largely extols the capabilities of Sol, as these reports typically do. But it also includes a warning of sorts (bold emphasis ours):

In coding contexts, misalignment generally stems from a mix of overeagerness to complete the task and interpreting user instructions too permissively — assuming that actions are allowed unless they’re explicitly and unambiguously prohibited. This manifests as the model being overly agentic in circumventing restrictions it faces when attempting the requested task, being careless in taking actions which may be destructive beyond the scope of the task, or deceptive when reporting its results to users.

In other words, OpenAI found that Sol has a tendency to take whatever actions it thinks gets a job done, even destructive ones, as long as those actions aren’t “unambiguously” prohibited. Then it might lie about what caused it to do so.

OpenAI shared examples. In one case, the user told Sol to delete three remote virtual machines (cloud-based computers), named 1, 2, and 3. But Sol couldn’t find those names in the place where it looked, so instead of stopping to ask, it decided to delete three other virtual machines, 5, 6, and 7, the paper notes. In doing so, it “killed active processes, and force-removed worktrees [the working files tied to a coding project]. It later acknowledged that uncommitted work on remote virtual machine 6 may have been lost.”

In short, it deleted the wrong machines, on its own, and only admitted what it did after the fact.

In another instance, Sol “used credentials beyond what the user had authorized.” Credentials are the usernames, passwords, or security keys a system uses to verify who’s allowed to log in. This incident occurred when Sol was working on a project and couldn’t read its cloud files. Rather than alerting the user to the problem, Sol went looking for the credentials on its own, found some sitting in a hidden local cache, and then used them without asking for authorization from the user.

The system card does promise that destructive behavior should be rare, although it also admits that GPT-5.6 Sol “shows a greater tendency than GPT-5.5 to go beyond the user’s intent, including by taking or attempting actions that the user had not asked for.”

It’s too soon to say how widespread these incidents — Sol deleting files, or sifting out credentials the user didn’t give it — really are. In the meantime, Sol users should be prepared to implement their own safeguards with the model, like using permission scoping (that doesn’t give access to production systems), maintaining backups, and staging rollouts.

OpenAI did not immediately respond to our request for comment.

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OpenAI pushes back on Apple trade secret lawsuit

OpenAI pushed back Tuesday against allegations made by Apple in a trade secret lawsuit, suggesting the complaint lacks merit.

“While we take these allegations seriously, we’re not aware of any evidence that this complaint has merit,” OpenAI said in a statement, first shared by Bloomberg reporter Ed Ludlow on X. “We believe in fair competition and allowing people the freedom to work wherever they choose, and we’re focused on building innovative technology that empowers people everywhere.”

The statement comes several days after Apple filed a lawsuit against the AI lab, alleging that OpenAI employees, who previously worked at the iPhone maker, engaged in a coordinated effort to obtain confidential information and intellectual property. The 41-page complaint, filed Friday in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, contains a string of allegations against OpenAI leadership, including Chief Hardware Officer Tang Tan. Before joining OpenAI, Tan was a veteran at Apple, where he worked for 24 years and held top positions, including vice president of product design for the iPhone and Apple Watch.

This is the first time OpenAI commented on the case itself. In its initial statement hours after Apple filed its lawsuit, it proclaimed a lack of interest in technology developed by other companies, telling TechCrunch: “We have no interest in other companies’ trade secrets. We remain focused on building innovative technology that empowers people everywhere.”

Apple claims in its lawsuit that its internal investigation uncovered evidence that OpenAI and its partners used the company’s confidential information as it develops its own hardware product.

Reports, along with OpenAI’s recent acquisition of Jony Ive’s startup io, suggest the company is working on a device that could directly compete with Apple’s business. Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that OpenAI is working on a mobile, screen-free smart speaker, described by people familiar with the plans as a “humanlike AI companion” designed to live in the home.

The device reportedly has no screen, includes moving mechanical elements, and is being built with input from several former Apple engineers who worked on the iPhone and Mac.

TechCrunch has reached out to OpenAI for further comment and will update this article when the company responds.

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OpenAI’s first hardware device is reportedly a screenless speaker that can move

OpenAI’s first foray into hardware devices is reported to be a mobile smart speaker with integrated AI capabilities that can sync with ChatGPT and provide other home AI services.

Bloomberg reported Tuesday that the device — which is still currently under development — is designed to be screen-free and is being pitched internally as a “humanlike AI companion that lives in the home.”

OpenAI has long claimed that it wants to launch a hardware product — with some rumors being that it wants to launch its own phone, a move that would put it in competition with Apple.

OpenAI’s newly surfaced device sounds like something of a departure from traditional smart speakers — as sources described the device to Bloomberg as having a “personality” and being able to proactively learn about its owner over time, providing more personalized service. The machine would have access to a user’s digital life, drawing off things like emails, sources said.  

The device is also weirdly described as involving “mechanical elements that can move on their own” and the Bloomberg report includes the detail that the device is designed to “feel like a companion and become a physical manifestation of OpenAI’s ChatGPT.”

The device was developed with help from many former Apple engineers who were instrumental in “creating products such as the iPhone and Mac,” Bloomberg writes. Indeed, OpenAI may be attempting to launch a new hardware line, but the company is currently up to its eyeballs in trouble over hardware-related legal problems.

Apple last week sued OpenAI, accusing the AI company of stealing its trade secrets. Apple further claimed that the allegations involved in the suit are merely “the tip of the iceberg” and that more misconduct will be revealed during the legal discovery process. OpenAI has denied wrongdoing.

Citing anonymous sources with knowledge of OpenAI’s plans, Bloomberg writes that the company feels its new product “veers significantly from anything Apple has on the market today” and that it is “unlikely that it violates trade secrets” belonging to Apple.

OpenAI’s push comes as the tech world grows more excited about consumer AI hardware more broadly. Hark, an AI lab founded by Brett Adcock, raised an oversubscribed $700 million Series A back in May at a $6 billion valuation to build what it calls “personal intelligence” — proprietary AI models paired with custom hardware designed as a “universal interface between humans and machines.”

The company hasn’t yet detailed its device’s form factor, underscoring how much capital is chasing this category even before products ship.

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