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This chapter argues that the partial automation of managerial authority should not matter when determining whether platform workers are—or should be treated as—employees or independent contractors under the law. It offers a close reading of an end-user license agreement (EULA) between the on-demand transportation company Uber and its drivers. In particular, the chapter examines the relationship between the EULA and Uber’s use of algorithmic management to design, direct, monitor, evaluate, and compensate drivers’ work. By scrutinizing this relationship through a theory of the “self” implicit in contract law, the chapter shows that the EULA grants Uber rights to direct drivers’ work and determine the principal terms of the agreement as it goes along. This unilateral discretion is difficult to reconcile with what the law expects of an enforceable contract. Rather, it resembles the open-ended authority that the law permits an employer over its employees. Uber exercises its extra-contractual discretion through the App. Algorithmic management enables Uber continually to recalibrate its putative bargain with drivers to the company’s advantage. One lesson of this analysis is that decision makers tasked with evaluating the employment status of platform workers should take more seriously the contractual component of being an “independent contractor.”
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