Liabooks Home|PRISM News

#Gig Economy

Total 7 articles

The Driverless Car Is Coming for the Gig Economy
EconomyEN
The Driverless Car Is Coming for the Gig Economy

Waymo's robotaxi expansion—400,000 rides a week and climbing—is already squeezing Uber and Lyft drivers. What happens when the disruption goes structural?

Your Voice Data Trained Military Spy Planes
TechEN
Your Voice Data Trained Military Spy Planes

Australian company Appen secretly used global gig workers to train US military surveillance systems. Somali refugees unknowingly contributed to operations they might have been targets of.

Ride-sharing app displayed on a phone in Tel Aviv
EconomyEN
Israel Uber Lyft Bill Approval: Is the Taxi Monopoly Ending?

On Jan 18, 2026, Israel's ministerial committee approved the Israel Uber Lyft bill, allowing ride-sharing giants to enter the market. Explore the impact on the taxi industry.

PRISM

PRISM by Liabooks

PRISM
Advertise with Us

Place your ad in this space

[email protected]
A delivery worker on a motorcycle in Mumbai traffic
EconomyEN
The End of the 10-Minute Dash: Why India 10-minute Delivery Scrap Happened

Blinkit and Swiggy's Instamart have scrapped their 10-minute delivery promise in India due to worker pushback and government intervention. Learn more about the impact.

90,000 Upvotes for a Lie: The Reddit AI-Generated Food Delivery Confession
TechEN
90,000 Upvotes for a Lie: The Reddit AI-Generated Food Delivery Confession

A viral Reddit post exposing a food delivery app has been identified as likely AI-generated. Learn how 90,000 people were misled by synthetic rage bait.

Pixels Over Packages: The DoorDash AI Delivery Fraud Scandal
TechEN
Pixels Over Packages: The DoorDash AI Delivery Fraud Scandal

DoorDash has banned a driver for using AI-generated photos to fake deliveries. Read about the DoorDash AI delivery fraud and how platform security is evolving to fight AI scams.

Instacart to Pay $60 Million to Settle FTC Claims of Deceptive 'Free Delivery' Ads
EconomyEN
Instacart to Pay $60 Million to Settle FTC Claims of Deceptive 'Free Delivery' Ads

Instacart will pay a $60 million settlement over an FTC lawsuit alleging the company used deceptive tactics like false 'free delivery' ads and undisclosed subscription terms.

PRISM

PRISM by Liabooks

PRISM
Advertise with Us

Place your ad in this space

[email protected]
PRISM

Advertise with Us

[email protected]