France fines Uber 800,000 euros over ride-sharing service

Agence France-Presse

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France fines Uber 800,000 euros over ride-sharing service

AFP

(UPDATED) San Francisco-based Uber will appeal the French court's ruling immediately, according to lawyers

PARIS, France (UPDATED) – Uber was fined 800,000 euros ($900,000) in France on Thursday, June 9, half of which was suspended, over its controversial UberPOP ride-sharing service.

Uber halted the use of UberPOP in France last July amid a storm of opposition to the service from taxi drivers.

UberPOP was subsequently banned in France.

In the court case that ended Thursday, the company was charged with “the illegal organization of a system that puts clients in contact with providers of road transport for payment.”

UberPOP’s chief executive in France, Thibaud Simphal, and the company’s director general in Western Europe at the time the charges were brought, Pierre-Dimitri Gore-Coty, were fined 30,000 euros and 20,000 euros respectively. Half of those sums were also suspended.

Lawyers for San Francisco-based Uber said the company would appeal “immediately.” (READ: EU warns against curbing companies such as Uber)

Uber was also accused of producing advertisements wrongly portraying the service as fully legal.

Prosecutors had called for a maximum fine of 1.5 million euros.

Uber has become one of the world’s most valuable startups, worth an estimated $50 billion, as it has expanded to more than 50 countries. – Rappler.com

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