Taxi drivers have to keep logs of how long they work each day and have medical checks. Uber drivers have no such requirements placed on them.
The drivers themselves rarely make much more than minimum wage, and there's a huge churn of people at Uber, Wilson said. That's quite a price to pay for a great rider experience, and saying goodbye to our existing taxi industry, perhaps.
Then there's AirBnB which operates along similar lines to Uber. Now a $42 billion giant, AirBnB like Uber is pushing the envelope and mostly shifting costs towards the independent operators who provide the accommodation it earns vasts amount of money from.
In some countries like Hong Kong and parts of Europe, renting out AirBnBs is illegal. Hong Kongers who flaunt the law and AirBnB their places risk up to two years' in prison and $36,000 in fines.
Despite the above the "sharing economy" companies still attract both customers and people willing to take risks in hope of rewards that may or may not materialise.
Like I said before, there's no putting the genie back into the bottle. Companies like AirBnB and Uber will be with us for the future, as technology makes them so easy to set up and operate, and to provide customers with choice and great service.
We should have a discussion however about how they're allowed to operate, but we won't unless something awful happens close to home or to us personally. Few of us care about the driver of a car we spend 20 to 30 minutes in, and whom we'll probably never see again. We should do though, as the wrong person behind the wheel can cause a huge amount of hurt and damage.
There are obvious reasons for regulation of passenger transport and guest accommodation, as unscrupulous operators would otherwise make a horrifying mess out of both areas. It's happened before, and it'll happen again when rules to protect public safety are weak.
That's something the Ubers and AirBnBs of this world need to respect. If it makes them uncompetitive or unable to provide the great service that attracts customers to them in droves, then their business model is wrong and the New Zealand government is right to threaten to ban them.