The undersanding eroticism through humiliationnumber keeps growing.
Lyft is facing yet another lawsuit, filed Wednesday in San Francisco, by 21 women alleging they were sexually assaulted or raped while using the ride-hail service. What's more, claims the suit, the company failed to address a known "sexual predator crisis" among its drivers.
The lawsuit, published in full by Insider Inc., follows a September suit by 14 other women with similar allegations. Essentially, argue the plaintiffs in the most recent case, Lyft put its riders in danger.
"At least as early as 2015, LYFT, including Lyft's officers, directors and/or managing agents, became aware that LYFT drivers were sexually assaulting and raping female customers," notes the lawsuit. "LYFT's response to this sexual predator crisis amongst LYFT drivers has been appallingly inadequate," it later adds.
When reached for comment, a Lyft spokesperson acknowledged the severity of the women's claims.
"What these women describe is something no one should ever have to endure," wrote the spokesperson. "Everyone deserves the ability to move about the world safely, yet women still face disproportionate risks."
At the heart of the matter, according to the suit, is that Lyft allegedly failed and continues to fail to boot dangerous drivers from its platform.
"LYFT continues to allow culpable drivers who have complaints of rape and sexual assault lodged against them to keep driving for LYFT," reads the lawsuit.
The suit asks that Lyft cover medical costs associated with the assaults, as well as compensatory damages.
Lyft, which is based in San Francisco, told Mashable that it launched over 15 safety features in the latter half of this year. These features, wrote the spokesperson, include in-app emergency assistance and "daily continuous criminal background monitoring of all of our drivers."
SEE ALSO: Ride-sharing alone scares some just as much as taking a self-driving car, survey findsNotably, Lyft says it has also partnered with RAINN, an anti-sexual violence organization, in an effort to provide "required sexual violence prevention education."
While those are all great steps, they do not change the reality of the 21 women at the heart of Wednesday's lawsuit.
Topics lyft
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best laptop deal: Save $390.99 on the Lenovo IdeaPad 3i
I've made $27,000 walking dogs. How you can, too
Best smartphone deal: Save $250 on the Google Pixel 9
Best Garmin deal: Save $100 on Garmin Venu 3S
Report: Match Group dating apps conceal assault cases
Best soundbar deal: Save $300 on the Sonos Arc
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for May 19, 2025
I've made $27,000 walking dogs. How you can, too
In Paris Agreement speech, Trump never acknowledged the reality of global warming
When Amazon's Customer Reviews Get Ridiculous (and Seriously Funny)
A hedgehog blown up 'like a beach ball' was popped in life
Microsoft Surface: The Good, the Ugly and the Unknown
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。