Just beat it! How Just Eat robo-fires its workers
Riepilogo
Date Reported: 22 Apr 2023
Location: Regno Unito
Companies
Just Eat - EmployerAffected
Total individuals affected: Number unknown
Migrant & immigrant workers: ( 1 - Romania , Express delivery , Men , Unknown migration status ) , Migrant & immigrant workers: ( 1 - Perù , Express delivery , Men , Unknown migration status ) , Migrant & immigrant workers: ( 1 - Bulgaria , Express delivery , Men , Unknown migration status )Issues
Right to Privacy , Surveillance , Dismissal , Access to Non-Judicial RemedyResponse
Response sought: Yes, by Worker Info Exchange
External link to response: (Find out more)
Action taken: Prior to the report's publication, Just Eat had committed to employing some couriers in France, but has since begun replacing workers recognised as employers or/and forcing them back into independent contractor status. Just Eat also turned to trade secrecy exemptions to counter the issues raised by Worker Info Exchange with regards to their data used in dismissals.
Source type: NGO
Summary
In this review we spotlight cases of automated robo-firings at Just Eat. We have noticed a marked growth in worker reports of such dismissals made to the App Drivers & Couriers Union (ADCU). In these and many other cases, workers are increasingly turning to trade unions to collectively challenge the asymmetrical power of platform employers who act with impunity to violate even the most basic employment and data protection rights of their workers.
Part of the language of employment misclassification is to refer to such dismissals instead as ‘deactivations’. A significant subset of these dismissals involve allegations of fraudulent behaviour in relation to delayed order collections at restaurants. We find dismissals under such circumstances especially concerning due to the use of flawed automated decision-making in management mechanisms...
All of these dismissals originate from opaque black box technologies which detect patterns in workers' personal data, and consistently fail to reflect the day to day reality of working in this precarious industry. We examine some of these cases to provide an up-to-date snapshot of the poor working conditions for Just Eat couriers...
While platform companies may deem themselves at the cutting edge of innovation, we find that poor technology and business process design at Just Eat has led to unnecessary complications for workers on the job and to incorrect fraud detection analysis with profound consequences. Through this research we aim to document the ways in which this workforce is continually exploited under abysmal working conditions, with chronic low pay and algorithmic control systems operated at scale by app technology...