Travis Kalanick thinks Uber screwed up: “Wish we had an autonomous ride-sharing product”

Travis Kalanick, the former CEO of Uber, made it clear on Wednesday: he believes the company’s decision to abandon its autonomous driving program was a mistake. Said Kalanick at the Abundance Summit in L.A., “Look, [new management] killed the autonomous car project we had going on. At the time, we were really only behind Waymo but probably catching up, and we were going to pass them in short order . . . I wasn’t running the company when that happened, but you know, you could say, ‘Wish we had an autonomous ride-sharing product right now. That would be great.’”
Uber sold its self-driving unit in a reported fire sale to the self-driving tech developer Aurora in 2020, three years after Kalanick was forced to step down. At the time, it made sense; autonomous driving was bleeding cash, and Uber had already spent hundreds of millions of dollars on the effort. Now, Waymo’s self-driving cars are tooling around the Bay Area, Los Angeles, Phoenix and popping up in new markets.
Waymo recently partnered in Austin with Uber, and Uber is betting its platform will be critical in growing the service. But business is business, and partnerships falter. If Waymo decides it doesn’t need a middleman, Uber, once the future of transportation, could find itself stuck in reverse.
You Might Also Like
Browser Use, one of the tools powering Manus, is also going viral
Manus, the viral AI “agent” platform from Chinese startup Butterfly Effect, has had an unintended side effect: raising the profile...
Nvidia GTC 2025: What to expect from this year’s show
GTC, Nvidia’s biggest conference of the year, begins Monday and runs till Friday in San Jose. TechCrunch will be on...
How to watch Nvidia GTC 2025, including CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote
GTC, Nvidia’s biggest conference of the year, will return starting Monday in San Jose. If you can’t make it in...
FBI, EPA, and Treasury told Citibank to freeze funds as Trump administration tries to claw back climate money
Citibank revealed in court filings on Wednesday that the FBI, the EPA, the EPA inspector general, and the Treasury Department...