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Ride-share and delivery company Uber Technologies UBER has some Christmas deliveries that could help provide a publicity and sales bump as the stock faces pressure from autonomous driving companies . What Happened: If you're one of the Americans who prefer having a real Christmas tree each year, but don't have the time to go buy one in person, Uber could have the solution for you along with its growing list of restaurant food it will deliver to your home. Uber is expanding its on-demand Christmas tree ordering, a service it launched in 2015 and has optimized on and off over the years, The Verge reported . The company partners with local vendors and for 2024 has expanded the offering nationwide. Uber drivers will bring a fresh-cut Christmas tree to homes and also a selection of Christmas decorations like wreaths. The service can be booked through the Uber Eats app. While Uber users nationwide can get a Christmas tree delivered, only select cities will have access to the newest holiday "delivery." Uber will send groups of carolers to homes in New York City, Dallas, Los Angeles, Miami and Washington D.C. starting on Dec. 7. Uber partnered with alcohol company Diageo on the carolers launch as the company and carolers will also bring you a holiday boozy treat as part of the partnership. Read Also: Uber Q3 Earnings – 31 Million Daily Trips, $1Billion Op Income, CEO Not Looking For Big M&A Deals, CFO Expects To Grow Organically Why It's Important: While Uber offering Christmas trees and carolers might not scream revenue growth, it could be a good way to promote the company's expansion outside of just ride share or simply delivering restaurant foods to homes. Uber is also rebranding its same-day delivery service from Uber Connect to Uber Courier. The service offers deliveries of packages with PIN verification to confirm delivery and live trip tracking. The company is also expanding its car seat offering to more cities, potentially providing more safety features for parents with small children looking for alternative transportation. The launch comes as Uber is facing competition from autonomous driving in larger cities and could face more competition from Tesla's future robotaxi launch. Uber stock fell Thursday on news that Alphabet Inc GOOG GOOGL owned Waymo is launching in Miami in 2026. Waymo will launch with human safety drivers in the city in 2025 with rides offered without safety drivers in 2026 as part of the company's robotaxi service. UBER Price Action : Uber stock is down 10% to $65.32 on Thursday versus a 52-week trading range of $54.84 to $87.00. Uber stock is up 11.9% year-to-date in 2024. Read Next: DoorDash Delivers Mattresses? College Student Promotion Puts Spotlight On ‘Better Sleep’ © 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.Bitcoin has surpassed the $100,000 mark as the post-election rally continues. What's next?
No. 1 South Carolina women stunned by fifth-ranked UCLA 77-62, ending Gamecocks’ 43-game win streakFORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — Zavian McLean scored 18 points to lead FGCU and Michael Duax secured the victory with a free throw with 21 seconds left as the Eagles defeated Florida International 60-59 on Sunday. McLean shot 7 for 12, including 2 for 5 from beyond the arc for the Eagles (2-5). Rahmir Barno scored 11 points and added five assists and three steals. Jevin Muniz shot 2 of 7 from the field and 5 for 5 from the line to finish with nine points. Jayden Brewer finished with 18 points and eight rebounds for the Panthers (2-5). Jonathan Aybar added 12 points for Florida International. Dashon Gittens also had seven points and eight rebounds. McLean scored 14 points in the first half and FGCU went into the break trailing 30-29. Barno scored a team-high nine points for FGCU in the second half. FGCU outscored Florida International by two points over the final half. The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar .
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Stock market today: Wall Street gains ground as it notches a winning week and another Dow record'Toxic stinker': Geraldo Rivera lays into Trump's 'low-life' nomination
Hershey Co. stock falls Thursday, underperforms marketGoogle Brings ‘Emotion To Captions’ With New Expressive Captions FeatureToby MacDonald has spent the past six years trying to gather all the information she can on what led to multiple asbestos breaches at her daughter's Summerside high school, Three Oaks Senior High, during renovations in 2017. Those renovations were conducted while students were still attending classes. Families were not initially notified. In a recent video posted to social media, MacDonald laid out dozens of pages on the floor, from a response to one of her many freedom of information requests, in an effort to show much information had been redacted — that is, removed from the documents by the P.E.I. government before being released. "All those squares?" she says in the video, referring to white boxes with black outlines, indicating where information has been severed. "That's information that is being withheld from parents." 'What was in that dust?' P.E.I. woman searches for answers about mishandling of asbestos in daughter's school $1,318 fee for TOSH renovation documents 'not reasonably calculated,' says privacy commissioner MacDonald has reached a conclusion after her years-long quest for answers. Calling freedom of information on P.E.I. "our last line of defence for transparency and accountability" in a private message to CBC News, she described the system in one word: "Broken." Skepticism about ability to prompt change On Friday, MLAs on P.E.I.'s standing committee on health and wellness will begin discussions on a review of the province's Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act . Light streams in through restored windows at Province House, the traditional seat of the provincial government on Prince Edward Island, in a photo from November. Freedom of information requirements are referred to as 'sunshine laws' in some jurisdictions. (Julien Lecacheur/CBC) Under law, that review is required to get underway sometime in 2024, meaning the committee is getting started just in time. But one member of the committee already worries the review may not have the scope or depth to lead to whatever changes are required. Back in March, Green MLA Peter Bevan-Baker managed to convince MLAs from all parties to vote in favour of creating a special committee that could devote more time to the task. Analysis The yawning black hole that can be P.E.I.'s access to information system P.E.I. spending millions in hope of hosting NHL Awards, documents show But that idea became snagged on a technicality. While MLAs voted for Bevan-Baker's amendment, the Progressive Conservative government never called back the actual motion he amended for a final vote. That means the province's health committee will be juggling freedom of information matters, among all its other responsibilities. How P.E.I.'s freedom of information system works — and doesn't work 39 minutes ago Duration 2:52 Requests for government information by a Prince Edward Island citizen or media agency can take years to fulfill — especially if the province has redacted so much information that the document doesn't reveal what the applicant wants to know. The privacy commissioner's office says the workload from handling appeals is overwhelming. Can a planned review by MLAs fix anything? "And so we end up with a situation where the busiest committee in the house is now tasked with dealing with a hugely important piece of legislation," Bevan-Baker said Thursday, suggesting the committee will struggle to deal with its mandate covering health care, housing, social development and justice issues while delivering the review. "If you look at what I would call the deterioration of the ability of citizens to get information about their government — which is sort of a fundamental principle of any democratic society — things have really gone downhill," he said of freedom of information in the province. Green MLA Peter Bevan-Baker tried to get a separate committee designated to review the province's Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, but the effort came to nothing because a legislative motion was never called for a final vote. (CBC) How the NHL numbers were obtained As one example, he pointed to the province's contract with the NHL. Tourism Minister Zack Bell tabled a copy of the deal that the Liberals had actually obtained through an access request. In both cases the dollar amounts were redacted. P.E.I.'s health-care system 'backed up and overburdened,' consultant says in report 20 corporations with ties to Irvings own more than 12,000 acres on P.E.I. Another standing committee used its subpoena power to compel Bell to table an unredacted copy of the contract. Without the ability to issue a subpoena, members of the public would have to ask P.E.I.'s privacy commissioner to conduct a review if they felt the government was withholding information it was required by law to release. Those appeals are taking years to complete. MacDonald said she has one underway dating from 2019. Documents released under access to information laws often have large sections redacted, or blacked out, because they are deemed to contain private or sensitive information. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada) CBC News has 11 reviews in progress with the privacy commissioner's office. The oldest is from a freedom of information request made in 2018. In October, reacting to a question about an ongoing review, the commissioner's office advised CBC News that it is dealing with "an overwhelming number of reviews awaiting deliberation and [an] increasing complexity of issues" in conducting them. P.E.I. government-commissioned report points to benefits of rental registry 10% of complaints against P.E.I. police in years leading up to 2023 substantiated, records show In its annual report for 2023 — released just last week — the privacy commissioner's office said provincial officials told it more than 500 access requests had been filed that year, and nearly one in 10 resulted in a request for a review from the commissioner. Doiron told CBC News last week that her office had recently added a fourth staff member to handle the workload and would soon add a fifth. Office of P.E.I.'s privacy commissioner working to tackle high case volume 8 days ago Duration 7:05 P.E.I.'s Information and Privacy Commissioner says a high caseload is causing delays in making decisions. CBC News: Compass host Louise Martin speaks with Denise Doiron about how her office is trying to get through its files. "The office of the commissioner is under-resourced. Government knows it and uses it to its advantage," Paul MacNeill, publisher of Island Press, told CBC News via email. He said access requests which used to take months now take years. "This is not in the public interest."
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