In January, Uber’s former top lobbyist, Mark MacGann, travelled to Geneva to meet reporters from The Guardian. “I’ve seen some really shady shit,” he observed, emptying out two suitcases of laptops, hard drives, iPhones and bundles of paper. The result, said The Verge, is a trove of some 124,000 documents, collectively known as the Uber Files, which expose the ruthless – and, according to one executive, sometimes “f***ing illegal” – tactics that drove the Silicon Valley ride-hailing firm’s global expansion from 2013-2017.
The files show how Uber, then led by co-founder Travis Kalanick, “flouted laws, duped police, exploited violence against drivers and secretly lobbied governments” in a $90m-a-year campaign to “disrupt Europe’s taxi industry”, said The Guardian. Two politicians – former European Commission vice-president Neelie Kroes, and France’s current president,…