Uber says Gen AI, agentic AI boost engineers' productivity, cut delays
Generative artificial intelligence (Gen AI) and Agentic AI are making some critical interventions to Uber's core operations, thus improving productivity of its engineers, said an executive of the ride-hailing platform.
Some of these operations include customer support, relooking at the engineering development lifecycle and easing up driver on-boarding.
A lot of these systems used to be manually operated but AI agents and automation have reduced human intervention over the last few years.
'Let us consider that drivers are not able to go online. We have 3,000 services internally and the problem is where to start,' Praveen Neppalli Naga, global chief technology officer (CTO) of mobility and delivery, said in an interaction with Business Standard.
He added, 'Now, we have a graph of all service calls which are monitored by AI and so if something is failing, we are able to identify the error quickly and detect the area of failure.'
Similarly, the entire on-boarding experience of drivers used to be manual with huge amounts of background checks and document verifications which took up a lot of time.
Uber now leverages AI to complete these tasks, resulting in quicker on-boarding of drivers.
For customer support, Uber uses a chatbot just like countless other companies that is automated. This, according to Naga, 'improves quality and productivity. To understand the way a product works in a certain market, it involves reading documents. Now, we have the internal AI tools to answer it.'
Naga added that the use of Cursor, an AI code editor, has improved operations.
He said, 'It is a tool we leverage, and helps us develop in an agentic way. That includes the development lifecycle, defining the product, coding, testing, deploying, monitoring and alerting. Here we use the AI models to understand which metrics went down so that the engineers can step in quickly.'
Uber, which has about 2,200 engineers in its two biggest engineering centres in Bengaluru and Hyderabad, said it will continue to hire at a steady pace. This will be in areas such as earner ecosystem, rider experience products, and marketplace teams.
The two centres handle critical functions for Uber, such as rider engineering, Eats engineering, infra-tech, data, maps, Uber for Business, fintech, customer obsession, and growth and marketing.
Its tech journey in India started in 2014 at a bungalow in Jubilee Hills, Hyderabad.
'We continue to foresee the needs over the next few years. We are doubling down on Shuttle and commute passes. And, on the delivery side, we have food delivery, which is big outside India. Also, there is the merchant ecosystem,' added Naga.
India remains a critical market for Uber with more than a million drivers, after the US and Brazil.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Taxi apps renew GST plea; PharmEasy founders start up again
Taxi apps renew GST plea; PharmEasy founders start up again Also in the letter: Ride-hailing firms to flag SaaS services GST worries to CBIC Jargon buster: Driving the news: Market dynamics: Rapido currently uses the subscription model for its autorickshaw and four-wheeler ride-hailing services. Uber has implemented the model for its three-wheeler offerings. Ola Consumer, which first adopted the subscription approach for autorickshaws, expanded it to include four-wheeler taxi services earlier this month. ONDC-backed Namma Yatri has operated on a subscription basis since its inception, offering autorickshaw rides without a commission. Catch up quick: PharmEasy founders venture out again with new startup All Home Tell me more: Key details: All Home has raised $20 million in equity and debt funding. The startup has been valued at $120 million. Bessemer Venture Partners led the funding round, alongside several angel investors. PharmEasy CEO Siddharth Shah has also invested in the company. Quote, unquote: IT's Europe deal momentum is up after three slow quarters Numberwise: IT deals originating from Europe rose by around 5% compared to the previous quarter, while the US market remained flat with just 2% growth, according to US-based research firm HFS Group. The total value of European deals climbed to $4.08 billion between January and March 2025, up from $3.4 billion in the previous quarter and $3.5 billion in the same period last year, as per data services platform ISG. Deal book: Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) signed six deals in Europe since March. Infosys partnered with Allied Irish Banks and the UK's Yorkshire Building Society. HCLTech secured an engineering services contract with Swedish truck maker Volvo. L&T Technology Services and Tata Elxsi each signed €50 million contracts with unnamed European automotive clients. Wipro has appointed a new CEO for its European strategic unit amid a softer outlook. Other Top Stories By Our Reporters Amazon India enters at-home diagnostics space, expands healthcare vertical: Zetwerk set to pump Rs 500–800 crore for component making: Infosys' Bengaluru, Chennai centres top April on-site attendance: Global Picks We Are Reading Happy Monday! Ride-hailing firms plan fresh appeals to the indirect tax department over GST on subscription-based services. This and more in today's ETtech Morning Dispatch.■ Indian IT's European spring■ Amazon's fresh foray■ Zetwerk's manufacturing pushCab aggregator firms are preparing to make new representations to the indirect taxes department concerning the contentious issue of the applicability of Goods and Services Tax (GST) for services offered under the subscription-based SaaS the SaaS model, platforms charge gig workers a fixed subscription fee instead of pocketing a commission on each transaction. In this case, SaaS stands for 'Subscription as a Service.'Companies such as Rapido, Uber, and Ola plan to express their concerns regarding how the subscription model is taxed. According to sources familiar with the matter, this renewed push follows conflicting interpretations by the Karnataka Authority for Advance Rulings (AAR), leading to inconsistent treatment of the SaaS 5% GST is applicable under Section 9 (5) of the Central GST Act. This provision requires ecommerce platforms, such as ride-hailing firms, food delivery companies, and online marketplaces, to collect and remit tax on behalf of service providers using their apps. These include drivers, restaurants, and ecommerce sellers.(L-R) Dharmil Sheth, Dhaval Shah, and Hardik Dedhia, founders, PharmEasyThree cofounders of PharmEasy, who exited their executive roles earlier this year, have launched a new startup focused on the architectural and interior design Sheth, Dhaval Shah, and Hardik Dedhia have launched All Home, which plans to back consumer-facing brands across various categories, including sanitaryware, furniture, kitchen and wardrobe, and home hardware. The venture will invest in these brands while offering a mix of technology support, digital-first manufacturing and distribution capabilities, and market intelligence.'Consumers are increasingly willing to invest in their living and working spaces, yet often lack access to the appropriate channels and products. Our platform aims to address this gap,' Dhaval Shah Indian IT firms facing headwinds in their largest market, the United States, due to policy and trade uncertainties, Europe has emerged as a bright spot . After three subdued quarters, deal activity across the continent has gained ecommerce giant has teamed up with Orange Health Labs to introduce its diagnostics service , allowing home sample collection within 60 minutes and providing test results in under six hours for routine Bengaluru-based unicorn is seeking to invest in the manufacturing of printed circuit boards (PCBs), enclosures, and electromechanical components such as heat sinks and sensors, while preparing an application for the government's PLI development centres in Bengaluru, Chennai, and Pune had the highest on-site attendance in April, while the offices in Nagpur, Indore, and Gurgaon recorded the lowest.■ The $10 billion delivery empire built on Shein and TikTok orders ( Rest of World ■ How to out-troll the trolls, as told by the internet's foremost posters ( Wired ■ You sound like ChatGPT ( The Verge


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Ride-hailing firms to flag SaaS services GST worries to CBIC
Ride-hailing platforms, including Ola , Uber , and Rapido , are set to make a fresh set of representations to the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) on the contentious issue of applicability of goods and services tax (GST) on services offered under the SaaS model. Under the SaaS model, platforms charge a fixed subscription fee to gig workers instead of a commission. Companies are expected to flag ambiguities arising from inconsistent tax treatment of the SaaS model following divergent rulings from the Karnataka Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR), said people in the know. They alleged that the Karnataka AAR 's decision is distorting competitive parity in the sector. While the Karnataka AAR allowed ONDC-affiliated Namma Yatri to operate without levying GST, it held that Uber and Rapido remain liable to pay the tax under the same model. ETtech Live Events Rapido operates the subscription model for its auto-rickshaw and four-wheeler ride-hailing offerings, while Uber has deployed this model for the three-wheeler ride-hailing. Ola Consumer, which started by deploying the subscription model for autorickshaws, earlier this month expanded it to four-wheeler taxi services as well. Discover the stories of your interest Blockchain 5 Stories Cyber-safety 7 Stories Fintech 9 Stories E-comm 9 Stories ML 8 Stories Edtech 6 Stories 'Some companies have taken a 'no-tax position' on the subscription model, and this creates inequality for tax-paying players who charge commission," said a senior executive at one of the ride-hailing firms . "The ride-hailing space is a price sensitive sector, and the fares offered to riders by those operating on the subscription model end up being significantly lower…this puts certain companies at a competitive disadvantage,' The move to launch subscription-based plans wherein platforms charge a fixed daily or weekly fee to driver partners on their platforms for an unlimited number of rides helps companies potentially bypass the 5% GST applicable on rides facilitated by them, people said. The 5% GST is applicable under Section 9 (5) of Central GST Act, which mandates ecommerce firms such as ride-hailing platforms, food-delivery companies, and online retailers to collect and pay tax on behalf of service providers listed on their apps. These include drivers, restaurants and e-marketplace sellers. Uber, Ola and Rapido did not respond to ET's queries. The fresh representations come in the backdrop of a recent Karnataka High Court order that asked CBIC to engage stakeholders and clarify its stand on the matter. On companies rolling out subscription model to bypass the 5% GST, tax experts said it could also lead to potential disputes between operators and tax authorities amid lack of clarity on whether a September 2023 advance tax ruling, which held that Namma Yatri need not collect and pay GST, would apply to other platforms as well. In July 2024, however, the Karnataka AAR ruled that Rapido was liable to pay GST for its cab services, and later in November issued a similar ruling saying Uber would also be liable to pay tax for services launched on the subscription model.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
7 hours ago
- Business Standard
We want to be a people-first organisation: Goldman Sachs CIO Marco Argenti
Engineers need to think about the problem first and not the solution, says Argenti premium Avik Das Bengaluru Listen to This Article Goldman Sachs, the storied American investment bank, is embracing generative AI (artificial intelligence) across its global operations, including its 9,000-strong workforce in India. In this exclusive interview with Business Standard, Chief Information Officer Marco Argenti discusses with Avik Das his strategic priorities, the evolving role of engineers, and why being people-first matters. Joining him, Gunjan Samtani, co-chairman and India head, talks of the future of the firm's engineering hubs in Bengaluru and Hyderabad. Edited excerpts… What are the three most important strategic priorities for you in the technology world?