As gig work's profitability dwindles in Latin America, workers resort to renting accounts from peers to sidestep platform bans, impacting up to 30% of gig workers in Mexico. Verification efforts by platforms like iFood and Uber struggle against this widespread practice.
Gig workers banned from platforms like iFood and Uber are now turning to a shadowy workaround: renting accounts from others. This trend, though against platform policies, has burgeoned as a popular method for sidestepped bans, with as many as 30% of gig workers in Mexico partaking. In Brazil, workers like Carvalho, pay a weekly “rent” for the privilege to work, sacrificing a portion of their earnings in the process.
The allure of account rentals isn't just about dodging bans. It's a reflection of the harsh realities of gig work in Latin America: declining profitability, rising operational costs, and an oversaturated market. This practice provides a vital, though precarious, income stream for both account renters and owners, despite the explicit prohibitions from platforms and the inherent risks involved.
Efforts to curb account renting by iFood and Uber through enhanced verification measures like ID checks and selfie requirements have met inventive resistance. Workers and account owners find ways to circumvent these checks, highlighting a cat-and-mouse game between platforms and users seeking to exploit system vulnerabilities for economic survival.
The rise of account renting is more than a workaround; it's a symptom of deeper issues within the gig economy. It underscores the precarious nature of gig work, the inadequacy of current platform policies to address worker grievances, and the creative lengths to which workers will go to claim their slice of the gig economy pie, even at the risk of scams and without insurance protections.
Will platforms ever outsmart account renters?
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