Uber's plan to get more people into fewer cars | Travis Kalanick

261,500 views ・ 2016-03-25

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
Today I wanted to -- well, this morning --
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I want to talk about the future of human-driven transportation;
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about how we can cut congestion, pollution and parking
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by getting more people into fewer cars;
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and how we can do it with the technology that's in our pockets.
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And yes, I'm talking about smartphones ...
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not self-driving cars.
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But to get started we've got to go back over 100 years.
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Because it turns out there was an Uber way before Uber.
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And if it had survived,
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the future of transportation would probably already be here.
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So let me introduce you to the jitney.
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In 1914 it was created or invented by a guy named LP Draper.
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He was a car salesman from LA, and he had an idea.
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Well, he was cruising around downtown Los Angeles,
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my hometown,
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and he saw trolleys
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with long lines of people trying to get to where they wanted to go.
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He said, well, why don't I just put a sign on my car
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that takes people wherever they want to go for a jitney --
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that was slang for a nickel.
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And so people jumped on board,
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and not just in Los Angeles but across the country.
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And within one year,
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by 1915,
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there were 50,000 rides per day in Seattle,
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45,000 rides per day in Kansas
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and 150,000 rides per day in Los Angeles.
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To give you some perspective,
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Uber in Los Angeles
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is doing 157,000 rides per day, today ...
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100 years later.
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And so these are the trolley guys,
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the existing transportation monopoly at the time.
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They were clearly not happy about the jitney juggernaut.
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And so they got to work
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and they went to cities across the country
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and got regulations put in place to slow down the growth of the jitney.
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And there were all kinds of regulations.
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There were licenses -- often they were pricey.
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In some cities,
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if you were a jitney driver,
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you were required to be in the jitney for 16 hours a day.
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In other cities,
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they required two jitney drivers for one jitney.
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But there was a really interesting regulation
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which was they had to put a backseat light --
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install it in every Jitney --
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to stop a new pernicious innovation which they called spooning.
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(Laughter)
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All right. So what happened?
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Well, within a year this thing had taken off.
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But the jitney, by 1919, was regulated completely out of existence.
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That's unfortunate ...
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because, well, when you can't share a car, then you have to own one.
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And car ownership skyrocketed
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and it's no wonder that by 2007,
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there was a car for every man, woman and child in the United States.
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And that phenomenon had gone global.
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In China by 2011,
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there were more car sales happening in China than in the US.
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Now, all this private ownership of course had a public cost.
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In the US, we spend 7 billion hours a year,
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wasted, sitting in traffic.
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160 billion dollars in lost productivity,
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of course also sitting in traffic,
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and one-fifth of all of our carbon footprint
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is spewed out in the air by those cars that we're sitting in.
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Now, that's only four percent of our problem though.
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Because if you have to own a car
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then that means 96 percent of the time your car is sitting idle.
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And so, up to 30 percent of our land and our space
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is used storing these hunks of steel.
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We even have skyscrapers built for cars.
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That's the world we live in today.
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Now, cities have been dealing with this problem for decades.
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It's called mass transit.
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And even in a city like New York City,
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one of the most densely populated in the world
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and one of the most sophisticated mass transit systems in the world,
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there are still 2.5 million cars that go over those bridges every day.
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Why is that?
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Well, it's because mass transit hasn't yet figured out
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how to get to everybody's doorstep.
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And so back in San Francisco, where I live,
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the situation's much worse,
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in fact, much worse around the world.
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And so the beginning of Uber in 2010 was --
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well, we just wanted to push a button and get a ride.
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We didn't have any grand ambitions.
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But it just turned out
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that lots of people wanted to push a button and get a ride,
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and ultimately what we started to see was a lot of duplicate rides.
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We saw a lot of people
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pushing the same button at the same time
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going essentially to the same place.
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And so we started thinking about,
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well, how do we make those two trips and turn them into one.
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Because if we did, that ride would be a lot cheaper --
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up to 50 percent cheaper --
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and of course for the city
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you've got a lot more people and a lot fewer cars.
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And so the big question for us was:
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would it work?
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Could you have a cheaper ride
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cheap enough that people would be willing to share it?
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And the answer, fortunately, is a resounding yes.
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In San Francisco,
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before uberPOOL, we had --
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well, everybody would take their car wherever the heck they wanted.
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And the bright colors is where we have the most cars.
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And once we introduced uberPOOL,
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well, you see there's not as many bright colors.
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More people getting around the city in fewer cars,
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taking cars off the road.
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It looks like uberPOOL is working.
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And so we rolled it out in Los Angeles
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eight months ago.
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And since then, we've taken 7.9 million miles off the roads
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and we've taken 1.4 thousand metric tons of CO2 out of the air.
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But the part that I'm really --
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(Applause)
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But my favorite statistic --
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remember, I'm from LA,
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I spent years of my life
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sitting behind the wheel, going, "How do we fix this?" --
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my favorite part is that eight months later,
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we have added 100,000 new people that are carpooling every week.
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Now, in China everything is supersized,
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and so we're doing 15 million uberPOOL trips per month,
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that's 500,000 per day.
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And of course we're seeing that exponential growth happen.
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In fact, we're seeing it in LA, too.
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And when I talk to my team, we don't talk about,
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"Hey, well, 100,000 people carpooling every week and we're done."
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How do we get that to a million?
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And in China, well, that could be several million.
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And so uberPOOL is a very great solution for urban carpooling.
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But what about the suburbs?
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This is the street where I grew up in Los Angeles,
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it's actually a suburb called Northridge, California,
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and, well --
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look, those mailboxes, they kind of just go on forever.
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And every morning at about the same time,
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cars roll of out their driveway,
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most of them, one person in the car,
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and they go to work, they go to their place of work.
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So the question for us is:
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well, how do we turn
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all of these commuter cars --
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and literally there's tens of millions of them --
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how do we turn all these commuter cars into shared cars?
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Well, we have something for this that we recently launched called uberCOMMUTE.
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You get up in the morning, get ready for work, get your coffee,
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go to your car
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and you light up the Uber app,
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and all of a sudden,
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you become an Uber driver.
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And we'll match you up with one of your neighbors
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on your way to work
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and it's a really great thing.
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There's just one hitch ...
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it's called regulation.
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So 54 cents a mile, what is that?
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Well, that is what the US government
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has determined that the cost of owning a car is per mile.
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You can pick up anybody in the United States
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and take them wherever they want to go at a moment's notice,
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for 54 cents a mile or less.
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But if you charge 60 cents a mile, you're a criminal.
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But what if for 60 cents a mile
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we could get half a million more people carpooling in Los Angeles?
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And what if at 60 cents a mile
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we could get 50 million people carpooling in the United States?
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If we could,
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it's obviously something we should do.
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And so it goes back to the lesson of the jitney.
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If by 1915 this thing was taking off,
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imagine without the regulations that happened,
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if that thing could just keep going.
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How would our cities be different today?
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Would we have parks in the place of parking lots?
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Well, we lost that chance.
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But technology has given us another opportunity.
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Now, I'm as excited as anybody else about self-driving cars
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but do we have to really wait five, 10 or even 20 years
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to make our new cities a reality?
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With the technology in our pockets today,
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and a little smart regulation,
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we can turn every car into a shared car,
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and we can reclaim our cities starting today.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Chris Anderson: Travis, thank you.
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Travis Kalanick: Thank you.
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CA: You know -- I mean the company you've built is absolutely astounding.
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You only just talked about a small part of it here --
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a powerful part --
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the idea of turning cars into public transport like that,
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it's cool.
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But I've got a couple other questions
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because I know they're out there on people's minds.
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So first of all, last week I think it was,
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I switched on my phone and tried to book an Uber
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and I couldn't find the app.
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You had this very radical, very bold, brave redesign.
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TK: Sure.
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CA: How did it go?
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Did you notice other people not finding the app that day?
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Are you going to win people over for this redesign?
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TK: Well, first I should probably just say,
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well, what we were trying to accomplish.
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And I think if you know a little bit about our history,
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it makes a lot more sense.
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Which is, when we first got started,
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it was just black cars.
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It was literally you push a button and get an S-Class.
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And so what we did
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was almost what I would call an immature version of a luxury brand
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that looked like a badge on a luxury car.
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And as we've gone worldwide
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and gone from S-Classes to auto rickshaws in India,
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it became something that was important for us
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to be more accessible,
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to be more hyperlocal,
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to be about the cities we were in
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and that's what you see with the patterns and colors.
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And to be more iconic,
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because a U doesn't mean anything in Sanskrit,
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and a U doesn't mean anything in Mandarin.
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And so that was a little bit what it was about.
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Now, when you first roll out something like that,
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I mean, your hands are sweating,
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you've got --
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you know, you're a little worried.
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What we saw is a lot of people --
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actually, at the beginning, we saw a lot more people opening the app
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because they were curious what they would find when they opened it.
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And our numbers were slightly up from what we expected.
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CA: OK, that's cool.
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Now, so you, yourself, are something of an enigma, I would say.
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Your supporters and investors, who have been with you the whole way,
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believe that the only chance
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of sort of taking on the powerful, entrenched interests
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of taxi industry and so forth,
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is to have someone who is a fierce, relentless competitor,
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which you've certainly proved to be.
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Some people feel you've almost taken that culture too far,
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and you know -- like a year or two ago
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there was a huge controversy where a lot of women got upset.
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How did it feel like inside the company during that period?
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Did you notice a loss of business?
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Did you learn anything from that?
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TK: Well, look, I think --
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I've been an entrepreneur since I've been in high school
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and you have --
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In various different ways an entrepreneur will see hard times
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and for us,
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it was about a year and a half ago,
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and for us it was hard times, too.
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Now, inside, we felt like --
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I guess at the end of the day
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we felt like we were good people doing good work,
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but on the outside that wasn't evident.
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And so there was a lot that we had to do
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to sort of --
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We'd gone from a very small company --
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I mean if you go literally two and a half years ago,
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our company was 400 people,
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and today it's 6,500.
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And so when you go through that growth,
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you have to sort of cement your cultural values
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and talk about them all of the time.
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And make sure that people are constantly checking
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to say, "Are we good people doing good work?"
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And if you check those boxes,
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the next part of that is making sure you're telling your story.
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And I think we learned a lot of lessons
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but I think at the end of it we came out stronger.
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But it was certainly a difficult period.
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CA: It seems to me, everywhere you turn,
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you're facing people who occasionally give you a hard time.
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Some Uber drivers in New York and elsewhere
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are mad as hell now because you changed the fees
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and they can barely -- they claim -- barely afford the deal anymore.
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How --
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You know, you said that you started this originally --
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just the coolness of pressing a button and summoning a ride.
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This thing's taken off,
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you're affecting the whole global economy, basically, at this point.
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You're being forced to be, whether you want it or not,
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a kind of global visionary who's changing the world.
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I mean -- who are you?
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Do you want that?
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Are you ready to go with that and be what that takes?
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TK: Well, there's a few things packed in that question, so --
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(Laughter)
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First is on the pricing side --
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I mean, keep in mind, right?
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UberX, when we first started,
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was literally 10 or 15 percent cheaper than our black car product.
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It's now
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in many cities, half the price of a taxi.
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And we have all the data to show
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that the divers are making more per hour than they would as taxi drivers.
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What happens is when the price goes down,
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people are more likely to take Uber
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at different times of the day than they otherwise would have,
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and they're more likely to use it in places they wouldn't have before.
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And what that means for a driver is wherever he or she drops somebody off,
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they're much more likely to get a pickup and get back in.
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And so what that means is more trips per hour,
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more minutes of the hour where they're productive
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and actually, earnings come up.
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And we have cities where we've done literally five or six price cuts
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and have seen those price cuts go up over time.
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So even in New York --
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We have a blog post we call "4 Septembers" --
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compare the earnings
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September after September after September.
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Same month every year.
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And we see the earnings going up over time
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as the price comes down.
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And there's a perfect price point -- you can't go down forever.
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And in those places where we bring the price down
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but we don't see those earnings pop,
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we bring the prices back up.
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So that addresses that first part.
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And then the enigma and all of this --
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I mean, the kind of entrepreneur I am
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is one that gets really excited about solving hard problems.
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And the way I like to describe it is it's kind of like a math professor.
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You know? If a math professor doesn't have hard problems to solve,
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that's a really sad math professor.
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And so at Uber we like the hard problems
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and we like getting excited about those and solving them.
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But we don't want just any math problem,
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we want the hardest ones that we can possibly find,
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and we want the one that if you solve it,
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there's a little bit of a wow factor.
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CA: In a couple years' time --
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say five years' time, I don't know when --
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you roll out your incredible self-driving cars,
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at probably a lower cost than you currently pay for an Uber ride.
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What do you say to your army of a million drivers plus at that time?
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TK: Explain that again -- at which time?
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CA: At the time when self-driving cars are coming --
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TK: Sure, sure, sure. Sorry, I missed that.
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CA: What do you say to a driver?
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TK: Well, look, I think the first part is it's going to take --
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it's likely going to take a lot longer
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than I think some of the hype or media might expect.
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That's part one.
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Part two is it's going to also take --
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there's going to be a long transition.
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These cars will work in certain places and not in others.
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For us it's an interesting challenge, right?
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Because, well --
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Google's been investing in this since 2007,
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Tesla's going to be doing it, Apple's going to be doing it,
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the manufacturers are going to be doing it.
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This is a world that's going to exist, and for good reason.
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A million people die a year in cars.
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And we already looked at the billions or even trillions of hours worldwide
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that people are spending sitting in them, driving frustrated, anxious.
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And think about the quality of life that improves
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when you give people their time back
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and it's not so anxiety-ridden.
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So I think there's a lot of good.
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And so the way we think about it is that it's a challenge,
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but one for optimistic leadership,
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Where instead of resisting --
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resisting technology,
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maybe like the taxi industry, or the trolley industry --
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we have to embrace it or be a part of the future.
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But how do we optimistically lead through it?
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Are there ways to partner with cities?
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Are there ways to have education systems, vocational training, etc.,
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for that transition period.
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It will take a lot longer than I think we all expect,
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especially that transition period.
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But it is a world that's going to exist,
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and it is going to be a better world.
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CA: Travis, what you're building is absolutely incredible
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and I'm hugely grateful to you for coming to TED and sharing so openly.
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Thank you so much. TK: Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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