A Truly Useful Application of Location-Aware Tech
BY Nancy Scola | Tuesday, March 16 2010
Turns out that cab drivers in New York City were, shockingly, overcharging passengers at a rate of $8 million over the last two years, reports the New York Times:
Using G.P.S. technology installed in cabs, the commission discovered more than 1.8 million trips where passengers were charged the higher rate. The total amount of the overcharge was $8,330,155, or an average of $4.45 per trip, the agency said. The agency said that drivers manually switched the meter from the standard rate of 40 cents per fifth of a mile to the 80-cents-per-fifth-of-a-mile rate that cabbies are allowed to charge in Westchester and Nassau Counties, but not in New York City.
To combat the overcharges, the commission said that within two weeks, a system would be installed in all taxis that would post an alert on the back-seat television screen when the meter is switched to the higher rate code. The alert would stay on the screen until the passenger acknowledged it.
Government data-wrangling has perhaps never found so high a calling.
