The bloody consequences of the electric scooter revolution


  • TECH
  • Wednesday, 31 Oct 2018

A person rides a Bird Rides Inc. shared electric scooter on the Embarcadero in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Friday, April 13, 2018. GPS-enabled scooters and bicycles are spreading across several major U.S. cities, driven by a wave of venture capital into a handful of companies. Policymakers are scrambling to find ways to regulate the great scooter boom of 2018. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

A lawsuit targeting electric scooter-sharing companies seizes on the dangers of zipping around town on two wheels and brings gory detail to one of the more polarising technology trends to emerge over the last year. 

Nine people who were injured by electric scooters filed the class-action suit on Oct 19 in Los Angeles County Superior Court. It accuses startups Bird Rides Inc and Lime – as well as their manufacturers Xiaomi Corp and Segway Inc – of gross negligence, claiming the companies knew the scooters were dangerous and deployed them in a way that was certain to cause injuries. 

Win a prize this Mother's Day by subscribing to our annual plan now! T&C applies.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tech News

New York governor regrets saying Black kids in the Bronx don’t know what a computer is
Biden to unveil $3.3 billion Microsoft AI investment in battleground Wisconsin
Apple’s China iPhone shipments soar 12% in March after discounts
Police in Vietnam arrest 20 for hacking Facebook accounts
Scammers use trojan horse virus to dupe 79-year-old SG man of RM605,000 of life savings
Hong Kong police foil dramatic robbery attempt caught on CCTV
UK tells tech firms to 'tame algorithms' to protect children
SoftBank in talks to buy AI chipmaker Graphcore, Bloomberg reports
Report: Chinese unicorn Zhipu AI to launch Sora rival as early as 2024 amid local race to catch up with OpenAI
Google Wallet now supports Maybank credit and debit cards, offering up to RM10 cashback on first use

Others Also Read