Episode Summary

The internet promised to revolutionise how we get around - delivering a modern, efficient, and affordable alternative to the old ways. But did the revolution simply replace one system with an unstable, exploitative gig economy, offering the illusion of flexibility with almost zero protections?Welcome to Ruined By The Internet? - the show where we examine how technology is shaping modern life - whether we want it to or not. Follow or subscribe to never miss the next investigation.We're joined by Rod Barton - former Victorian Member of Parliament and founder of the Transport Matters Party - who fought the regulatory battle for taxi drivers firsthand, and understands better than most what happens when platforms disrupt an industry and governments struggle to keep up.In this episode we investigate how rideshare platforms dismantled the traditional taxi industry, examine the safety and insurance gaps that opened up in the process, explore the rights of gig economy workers caught between flexibility and exploitation, and ask whether government regulation has any hope of keeping pace with the platforms rewriting the rules.(00:00) The internet's impact on the taxi industry (03:01) What the taxi industry looked like before rideshare (05:52) The regulatory framework rideshare bypassed (08:57) Safety and insurance gaps in rideshare services (12:13) Gig economy workers — flexibility or exploitation? (15:05) Customer service in the age of algorithmic dispatch (17:50) Where the gig economy is heading (21:00) The role of government in regulating platform transport (23:55) What a fair path forward looks like for drivers and ridersKey takeaways:• Innovation via Regulatory Arbitrage: The rapid ascent of rideshare giants was less an achievement of superior technology and more a deliberate exploitation of legal loopholes.• Destruction of Intergenerational Equity: The sudden de-regulation and refusal of state governments to protect taxi licences stripped working-class operators of their financial security.• Exploitative Architecture of the "Gig Economy": The shift from traditional employment or stable independent contracting to a platform-based model systematically offloads all operational risk from the corporate entity onto the individual worker.• Erosion of Local Corporate Accountability: The gig economy allows foreign entities to funnel local economic wealth out of the country, and remain largely detached from the long-term social health of the communities they operate in.If this episode got you thinking, check out:Rental Markets: A Frantic Fight for Shelter As A Service?https://pod.link/1825601333/episode/ZDU3ZjAzYjktMmZiZi00NmM3LTg4M2ItYTE4OGI1ZWQ2YTFlBroadcast Television: The Digital Dismantling of an Entire Industry?https://pod.link/1825601333/episode/OTc0YmNmYzItMTI4ZC00OTcwLTk0YWYtYjdjNjY2MTYxYmFjMusic: An Algorithmic Burial of Human Artists?https://pod.link/1825601333/episode/MGEwYmZiOTUtMTAyNS00ZDA1LTlkNmMtNjlhYjhkNzBjMmQzGuest links — Rod Barton Website: https://rodbarton.com.au LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/rod-barton Facebook: https://facebook.com/RodBarton08
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