By Tina Bellon
(Reuters) – Uber Technologies Inc
Uber instituted its “No Mask No Ride” policy on May 18 and extended it indefinitely due to the ongoing pandemic, requiring both drivers and riders to wear a face covering at all times during a ride.
Drivers are required to take a selfie with a mask each day before starting work, while drivers and riders are able to cancel a trip without penalty if they report the other party is not wearing a mask. Failure to comply can lead to account deactivation.
The rider selfie feature will be rolled out in the United States and Canada by the end of September, and across Latin America and other regions after that, Uber said.
Unlike for drivers, the rider app will only prompt a passenger to take a selfie if a driver previously reported they were not wearing a mask.
“We definitely wanted to make sure that we are targeting this feature to riders who are maybe just coming back to the platform and maybe they’re not aware of … our (mask) policy,” Sachin Kansal, Uber’s Senior Director of Product Management, said in an interview.
Demand for ride-hailing trips has dropped sharply during the pandemic, especially in the United States, Uber’s largest market.
Kansal said 99.5% of all Uber trips since mid-May had been completed without driver or rider complaints over masks.
The selfie feature does not use facial recognition technology, but simply detects the mask as an object on the face, Kansal said. Uber stores selfie photos for 96 hours to settle potential disputes, but then permanently deletes them, a spokesman added.
(Reporting by Tina Bellon in New York; editing by Richard Pullin)