Defunct Startup Sidecar Sues Uber: ‘Hell-Bent on Stifling Competition’

Defunct Startup Sidecar Sues Uber: ‘Hell-Bent on Stifling Competition’
The Uber, Lyft and Juno logos are seen on a car as it drive up 6th Avenue in New York City, July 27, 2018. Mike Segar/File Photo/Reuters
|Updated:

SAN FRANCISCO—Defunct startup Sidecar Technologies Inc., which pioneered on-demand ride-hailing, is suing Uber Technologies Inc., alleging it engaged in predatory pricing and anti-competitive practices that ultimately put Sidecar out of business.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. district court in San Francisco early on Dec. 11, claims “Uber became hell-bent on stifling competition from competing ride-hailing apps,” and used subsidies and made fake ride requests to competitors in a bid to dominate the market. Sidecar went out of business in December 2015 and sold its assets to General Motors Co. in 2016.