Business
Uber and Google: From partners to rivals
San Francisco, Feb 4
US-based taxi-hailing
app Uber and Google are on a collision course after the former's
decision to work on autonomous vehicle technology and Google's reported
plan to launch a ride-sharing service of its own.
A Google
spokesperson declined Tuesday to comment on the matter on which the
company had earlier tweeted: "We think you'll find Uber and Lyft work
quite well. We use them all the time."
Also a ride-share company, Lyft is Uber's direct competitor.
It
was Google's response to the announcement of Uber's partnership with
Carnegie Mellon University for research and development work in mapping
and autonomy technology, two areas in which Google has made significant
progress.
The company that puts riders in touch with private car
owners in cities worldwide announced the creation of the Uber Advanced
Technologies Center in Pittsburgh on its blog.
Google has
invested hundreds of millions of dollars in Uber through its venture
capital arm and its chief legal officer, David Drummond, is on the Uber
board of directors.
According to media reports, Google too is
planning to launch its own ride-hailing service in conjunction with its
driver-less car project.
An anonymous source quoted by The Wall
Street Journal said that reports that Google was developing an app to
rival Uber had been blown out of proportion.
The source said that
a Google engineer had been testing an internal app that helps Google
employees carpool to work and denied that the app was associated with
the company's driver-less cars programme.












