Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Legacy Archives

Traffic held at a standstill in Europe, as cab drivers protest Uber

Add as a preferred source on Google

Thousands of taxi drivers across Europe blocked roads and held demonstrations in protest against Uber, which recently expanded its car calling service to London, Paris, and Berlin.

According to the New York Times, London cabbies caused a massive traffic jam by parking their vehicles in the city’s center. The protesters reportedly stopped their cars in the middle of the street, leaving buses, cars, and trucks stranded behind them. The drivers then got out of their vehicles and handed out leaflets in protest. Police officers were said to be unsuccessful in getting traffic to move. 

Recommended Videos

“In 5 to 10 years, the cab industry in London will be devalued,” Paul Hodge, who has been driving a London black cab for 32 years, told the New York Times. “Black cab drivers are the best in the world. We’re fed up of not being treated with respect.”

The protest happened in six Euopean cities. Aside from London, Paris, and Berlin, taxi drivers in Milan, Madrid, and Lisbon held similar protests. According to Bloomberg, more than 30,000 taxi and limo drivers participated in the demonstrations, blocking traffic in tourist centers and shopping districts.

Uber fought back against protesters. In Paris, where drivers protested by choking traffic in the city’s two main airports, the service offered customers a 50% discount. The company also offered the deal in Lyon, the other French city in which it operates.

Aside from fears that competition from Uber would weaken their business, cab drivers are also complaining about what they claim to be a lack of regulation over the company’s freelance chauffeurs. 

“We have to have a license to own a cab, we have to have a driver’s license, a cab driver’s license,” Mark Haslam, a participant in the protest, told Bloomberg. “For some reason they seem to be outside the law.”  

Uber’s entry into the European market seems destined to be a tough proposition. Earlier this year, Brussels made it illegal for Uber to operate in the city, citing the service’s lack of necessary permits. In France, the government imposed a 15-minute waiting period on the service before it can pick up customers. The rule was eventually reversed last February. At the time, taxi drivers in the country launched violent protests against Uber vehicles. There were reports of demonstrators hurling rocks and slashing tires.

Christian Brazil Bautista
Christian Brazil Bautista is an experienced journalist who has been writing about technology and music for the past decade…
Topics
WWDC 2026: iOS 27, Siri AI, Apple Intelligence upgrades, and everything else
Apple stopped making promises at WWDC 2026 and started delivering: Siri AI, six OS updates, and Cook's farewell.
WWDC 2026 poster

Unlike most years, Apple’s WWDC 2026 carried more weight than usual, not just because it was Tim Cook’s final keynote as CEO, but also because it represented Apple’s chance at redemption after missing deadlines, mounting questions, and criticism about its ability to keep pace in the AI race. 

Fortunately, Apple answered many of those questions on June 8, 2026, unveiling an upgraded AI-powered Siri alongside a range of new Apple Intelligence features, while also raising a few fresh questions. WWDC was packed with announcements across six operating systems that underpin Apple’s ecosystem of devices. 

Read more
iOS 27 offers the clearest sign that a foldable iPhone is right around the corner
Resizable iPhone apps may be Apple’s first step toward a foldable iPhone
iPhone Ultra

Apple’s WWDC 2026 event was packed with major software announcements, including its new Siri AI experience, expanded child safety tools, and the latest operating system updates for its phones, Macs, and iPads. It was only a matter of time before someone dug out something interesting from the new software, and developer Sam Henri Gold might have just found the biggest clue yet that Apple is planning to launch a foldable iPhone soon.

iOS 27 is quietly preparing apps for a foldable future

Read more
Smartphones are to blame for declining birth rates, as studies highlight the iPhone’s role
Two new papers link smartphone adoption to falling birth rates in the US and across 128 countries, though some economists say the case remains unproven.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

The timing has long raised questions. Birth rates in the US and dozens of other countries began falling in 2007, the same year Apple put the first iPhone on sale. Two new academic papers, highlighted by The New York Times, now argue that the overlap is not a coincidence.

What the research found

Read more