A Waymo car ended a ride early, then the company told the passenger to get an Uber

9 hours ago 9

A white self-driving Waymo car, with cameras and other sensors on its roof and its sides, pulls out of a parking lot in San Francisco.

One Waymo rider said that one of the self-driving car company's support staff suggested he take an Uber or Lyft ride instead. Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

Sam Schwartz expected Waymo's cars to go the extra mile — or, at least, three-tenths of one.

That is roughly how far Schwartz said he was from his hotel in downtown San Francisco when the Waymo taxi he and his wife were riding in suddenly stopped and refused to move. The couple visited the city earlier this month.

As Schwartz tried to figure out what was going on in a conversation with Waymo support, the employee on the phone said that there was a "huge blockage" preventing the car from reaching his hotel. Then, the employee told Schwartz: "You can request another ride, probably Uber or Lyft," according to a video Schwartz posted on LinkedIn.

"As my son told me, what an advertisement for Uber," Schwartz told Business Insider.

A Waymo spokesperson said that the car was halted because of a "restriction placed after our operations team learned of planned protest activity." The spokesperson did not respond when asked what protest was taking place.

Waymo suggests other transportation options when cars cannot reach a passenger's destination, the company said.

"We're looking into this further to see how we could have better served the rider in this case, in addition to providing a refund," the spokesperson said.

Schwartz's experience shows some of the hiccups that Waymo's self-driving vehicles face as they become more common on streets across the US.

In at least two incidents this month, Waymo cars drove into floodwaters, prompting the company to issue a software recall and suspend service in six cities, including Atlanta and San Antonio. Separately, the company has halted rides on highways to improve performance around construction zones.

Ultimately, Schwartz and his wife chose to walk back to their hotel, though his wife is disabled and has trouble walking long distances. Waymo refunded Schwartz's fare for the ride, he said.

Questions about Waymo's expansion

Schwartz said he was visiting San Francisco specifically to ride in Waymo's cars. Schwartz is an author who wrote a 2018 book on self-driving technology, "No One at the Wheel," and said he's working on a novel about the technology.

Overall, Schwartz said he was impressed by the Waymo rides he took. During another ride through San Francisco on the same trip, he said, the Waymo car he took maneuvered smoothly around another self-driving car, passing within a few inches of it but never hesitating in the same way that a human driver might.

"The Waymo moved with such precision," he said. "I am impressed with the technology."

Schwartz said that his attempted ride to his hotel, though, left him with questions about Waymo's plans to launch its service in other cities.

Waymo has been testing its cars on the streets of Washington, DC, for over a year, though it is not yet offering passenger rides there. The company has also tested self-driving cars in New York City.

Places like Manhattan and downtown Brooklyn are far denser and busier than San Francisco, Schwartz said.

"If it couldn't handle that, it can't possibly make it in New York," he said.

Do you have a story to share about Uber, Waymo, Lyft, or another company involved in self-driving cars? Contact this reporter at [email protected] or via encrypted messaging app Signal at 808-854-4501. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here's our guide to sharing information securely.

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Alex Bitter is a senior retail reporter covering the gig economy, food, and retail. His work focuses major gig delivery and ride-hailing apps, including Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, Instacart, and Walmart's Spark. He is interested in everything from what it's like to work on the apps to the companies' business strategies.Some of his recent stories feature gig workers who have been deactivated on the apps, DoorDash hiring traditional employees to make deliveries, gig workers' use of bots, and gig work expanding into new professions, such as nursing.Alex has also written about Aldi's US expansionStarbucks' turnaround efforts, and the fallout from Kraft-Heinz's budget cutting. Convenience store chain Sheetz ended its "smile policy" after his reporting.Before joining Insider in September 2020, he wrote about consumer and retail companies for S&P Global Market Intelligence. He's a graduate of the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa and grew up on the Big Island.Alex lives in the Washington, DC, area, where you can find him studying ancient coins or searching for Civil War artifacts with his metal detector in his free time.Got a tip? Reach out at [email protected] or via encrypted messaging app Signal at +1 (808) 854-4501.

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