Yes, it felt like it was all to hide surge info from consumers.
Surge pricing gives the consumer insight into when they're being charged more. Many consumers reluctantly will pay a high price, but will not pay an "inflated" price.
It also allowed areas like sf to have continuous surges over weekends at low levels without consumers feeling like "uber is always surging".
Surge pricing gives the consumer insight into when they're being charged more. Many consumers reluctantly will pay a high price, but will not pay an "inflated" price.
It also allowed areas like sf to have continuous surges over weekends at low levels without consumers feeling like "uber is always surging".