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Uber has been secretively deceiving authorities for years with a tool called 'Greyball'

A tool called Greyball allowed Uber to identify and evade authorities in cities worldwide, according to The New York Times.

Uber has been using a secretive tool to evade authorities for years, particularly at times when city regulators were trying to block the ride-hailing service, according to a new report by The New York Times' Mike Isaac.

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Called Greyball, the tool collected data from Uber's app to identify and evade officials in cities like Boston, Paris, and Las Vegas. The Times reports that the program was used in markets where Uber was outright banned or being resisted by law enforcement.

Current and former Uber employees provided documentation to The Times of Greyball's use.

Uber did not deny the existence of the tool in a statement it provided to Business Insider. The company said the tool was an important measure to protect drivers by flagging dangerous individuals who might try to harm its drivers.

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Uber also sought to justify the tool's ability to deceive authorities by calling into question the motives of city officials, who Uber suggested were colluding with unspecified "opponents" of the company.

Uber reportedly started using Greyball as early as 2014 and is still in use today. Greyball is part of a larger program called VTOS, or “violation of terms of service,” that allows Uber to suss out people thought to be targeting the ride-hailing service improperly.

The VTOS program and the Greyball tool used techniques like looking at a user's credit-card information and seeing if it was tied to an institution, such as a police credit union, to identify authority figures, according to the report.

The news comes at a time where Uber is under scrutiny after Susan Fowler, a former Uber engineer, wrote in a blog post that she had faced sexism and gender bias in the workplace.

Read the full report by The New York Times here.

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