General Fraud/scam in cab-ride hailing online app

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General Fraud/scam in cab-ride hailing online app
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Can you think of a solution to the following fraud/scam in cab-ride hailing online app?

For the sake of explanation I will use following acronym:

CRHOA: Cab-Ride Hailing Online App

Cab driver picked the passenger, forced to cancel the CRHOA booking midway but continued the ride without CRHOA (ie. with CRHOA booking cancelled) and then grossly overcharged.

Did you get my point?

After the customer booked on CRHOA, the cab driver arrived. The customer sits in the cab and the driver begins the journey. When about 15-20% of the total journey distance is covered, the cab driver forces the customer to cancel the booking by speaking in a loud intimidating voice. If the customer had asked to stop the cab, obviously the driver would have refused and continued driving. Since the booking was cancelled, the business was done on the cab driver's personal basis. And the fare that the driver charged was exorbitant.

Can you think of a technical solution to this particular scam/fraud?

The customer support of CRHOA company won't entertain any complaint because the booking done by using CRHOA was cancelled.

The driver was an intimidating and persistent goon. Anyway, even if he was not a goon, does the customer pay for a peaceful ride or does he pay for a quarrel with the cab driver over whether or not to cancel the booking?

The real culprit are the lot at customer support who don't address valid complaints made by customers. Actually they may be collaborating with such drivers in doing these scams.

You may ask, "Since the booking was cancelled, what's the evidence of the scam?"

Not exactly evidence but a clue that the scam may indeed have happened: Digital payment made to the cab driver.

But the customer support aren't using the feedback to weed out unscrupulous drivers.

fb_img_1729094569876-jpg.10682
 
Can you think of a solution to the following fraud/scam in cab-ride hailing online app?

For the sake of explanation I will use following acronym:

CRHOA: Cab-Ride Hailing Online App

Cab driver picked the passenger, forced to cancel the CRHOA booking midway but continued the ride without CRHOA (ie. with CRHOA booking cancelled) and then grossly overcharged.

Did you get my point?

After the customer booked on CRHOA, the cab driver arrived. The customer sits in the cab and the driver begins the journey. When about 15-20% of the total journey distance is covered, the cab driver forces the customer to cancel the booking by speaking in a loud intimidating voice. If the customer had asked to stop the cab, obviously the driver would have refused and continued driving. Since the booking was cancelled, the business was done on the cab driver's personal basis. And the fare that the driver charged was exorbitant.

Can you think of a technical solution to this particular scam/fraud?

The customer support of CRHOA company won't entertain any complaint because the booking done by using CRHOA was cancelled.

The driver was an intimidating and persistent goon. Anyway, even if he was not a goon, does the customer pay for a peaceful ride or does he pay for a quarrel with the cab driver over whether or not to cancel the booking?

The real culprit are the lot at customer support who don't address valid complaints made by customers. Actually they may be collaborating with such drivers in doing these scams.

You may ask, "Since the booking was cancelled, what's the evidence of the scam?"

Not exactly evidence but a clue that the scam may indeed have happened: Digital payment made to the cab driver.

But the customer support aren't using the feedback to weed out unscrupulous drivers.

fb_img_1729094569876-jpg.10682
Did you personally face this? Because this experience is floating around in many places. So I believe you would have seen some 'solutions' there too. Although in my opinion there is no solution other than confronting the driver, which many softies won't do.

You can't have technology solution for every haraami. Sometimes you just got to use your Gee ka Dee
 
The driver was an intimidating and persistent goon. Anyway, even if he was not a goon, does the customer pay for a peaceful ride or does he pay for a quarrel with the cab driver over whether or not to cancel the booking?

Can you think of a technical solution to this particular scam/fraud?
Grow a pair and refuse to pay.
 
Did you personally face this? Because this experience is floating around in many places. So I believe you would have seen some 'solutions' there too. Although in my opinion there is no solution other than confronting the driver, which many softies won't do.

You can't have technology solution for every haraami. Sometimes you just got to use your Gee ka Dee
How about this? Cancellation is done only if there's conversation between customer support and customer and it is confirmed that customer wasn't under any pressure to cancel the ride. Or is such process time-consuming?
 
How about this? Cancellation is done only if there's conversation between customer support and customer and it is confirmed that customer wasn't under any pressure to cancel the ride. Or is such process time-consuming?
Again, processes and technology is for decent people. A haraami who forces you to cancel a trip will also stop you from calling customer support. Why don't you get this. There cannot be a tech/process solution if someone has decided to go haraami.
 
Again, processes and technology is for decent people. A haraami who forces you to cancel a trip will also stop you from calling customer support. Why don't you get this. There cannot be a tech/process solution if someone has decided to go haraami.
Do you mean to say that the goon can force the customer to lie on phone? Do you mean to say that the goon can say, "Tell customer support that you are cancelling willingly. If you hint that I forced you to cancel I will beat you." Something like that?
 
Do you mean to say that the goon can force the customer to lie on phone? Do you mean to say that the goon can say, "Tell customer support that you are cancelling willingly. If you hint that I forced you to cancel I will beat you." Something like that?
Goon will simply not allow you to make a call. Did you not see the video from bangalore where the auto driver was trying to snatch the phone from the girl?
 
Can you think of a solution to the following fraud/scam in cab-ride hailing online app?

For the sake of explanation I will use following acronym:

CRHOA: Cab-Ride Hailing Online App

Cab driver picked the passenger, forced to cancel the CRHOA booking midway but continued the ride without CRHOA (ie. with CRHOA booking cancelled) and then grossly overcharged.

Did you get my point?

After the customer booked on CRHOA, the cab driver arrived. The customer sits in the cab and the driver begins the journey. When about 15-20% of the total journey distance is covered, the cab driver forces the customer to cancel the booking by speaking in a loud intimidating voice. If the customer had asked to stop the cab, obviously the driver would have refused and continued driving. Since the booking was cancelled, the business was done on the cab driver's personal basis. And the fare that the driver charged was exorbitant.

Can you think of a technical solution to this particular scam/fraud?

The customer support of CRHOA company won't entertain any complaint because the booking done by using CRHOA was cancelled.

The driver was an intimidating and persistent goon. Anyway, even if he was not a goon, does the customer pay for a peaceful ride or does he pay for a quarrel with the cab driver over whether or not to cancel the booking?

The real culprit are the lot at customer support who don't address valid complaints made by customers. Actually they may be collaborating with such drivers in doing these scams.

You may ask, "Since the booking was cancelled, what's the evidence of the scam?"

Not exactly evidence but a clue that the scam may indeed have happened: Digital payment made to the cab driver.

But the customer support aren't using the feedback to weed out unscrupulous drivers.

fb_img_1729094569876-jpg.10682

There should be an OTP to end the trip also. ModiReign
Haramiyo ka game FINIS.

For driver's safety from scumbag customers, the app should track the current location of customer.
 
Bengaluru woman jumps from moving auto after drunk driver takes wrong route, Namma Yatri responds

By HT News Desk
Edited by Anagha Deshpande
Jan 03, 2025 03:08 PM IST

The woman, who had booked the auto-rickshaw via the Namma Yatri app, was traveling from Horamavu to her home in Thanisandra.

A 30-year-old woman narrowly escaped harm on Thursday night in East Bengaluru when she made a decision to jump from a moving auto-rickshaw. The incident unfolded when she realized that the driver was veering off course, heading toward an unfamiliar destination despite her clear instructions.

Though the woman has not officially reported the incident to the authorities, her husband, Azhar Khan, shared the troubling experience on X (formerly Twitter), tagging the Bengaluru city police. In his post, he claimed that the driver was intoxicated at the time of the incident.

The woman, who had booked the auto-rickshaw via the Namma Yatri app, was traveling from Horamavu to her home in Thanisandra. She noticed something was wrong when the driver, instead of following the usual route, began heading toward Hebbal. After questioning him multiple times, she realized the driver was unresponsive to her requests to stop the vehicle.

According to her husband, the driver’s erratic behavior raised alarm bells, particularly as the woman noticed the driver’s red eyes and overall signs of intoxication. “When the vehicle reached Nagavara, the driver made a sudden turn towards a flyover that wasn’t part of the route,” Khan told Times of India.

Despite her repeated pleas for him to stop, the driver ignored her, prompting the woman to jump from the moving auto as it slowed down near the down ramp.

Fortunately, she did not sustain any injuries. However, the ordeal was far from over. After escaping the vehicle, the driver approached her, attempting to convince her to get back in, but she refused. She opted to pay for the ride online and hailed another auto to complete her journey home.

“This is a grave issue concerning women’s safety. If this can happen to my wife at 9 PM, imagine how many other women face similar situations while traveling late at night,” Khan said according to a report by TOI.

While the incident gained attention on social media, Namma Yatri responded with a direct message to Khan, thanking him for his time on the call and offering further assistance.

“Thank you for your time over the call, Azhar. Please DM us for further assistance on this”.

Though his wife initially feared the driver might retaliate, prompting her to hesitate in filing a complaint, the police contacted Khan after his social media post gained attention.

 

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