Just this week in Vantaa, Finland three 12-year-old girls piled onto one of those electric scooters you subscribe to with an app and proceeded to get run over by a car at a crossing, killing one of them

The app is supposed to have an age restriction but it’s easy to bypass and you’re not supposed to have more than one person riding on one, which people routinely ignore

I hate seeing kids and teens speeding around dangerously on those fucking things and then just leaving them laying around on high-traffic bike routes because they don’t give a shit since they treat the scooters as completely disposable

Fucking awful bazinga-brained Silicon Valley-ass idea and business model. Actually, there are also bikes you can use with an app but curiously you don’t see kids doing reckless shit with those, almost as if electric scooters were uniquely terrible thonk

    • space_comrade [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      15 days ago

      Yes they do what the fuck are you on about. We did all kinds of stupid shit on bicycles as kids, I’m astonished I didn’t have more broken bones as a kid.

        • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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          15 days ago

          seems like designated areas to leave rented machines & some kind of penalty for leaving them where-ever is more in order. which also fixes the absurdity of a truck going everywhere a scooter person has at the end of every night to pick them all up-charge-relocate

          • Ngl the fact that they don’t have designated return spots is one of the reasons they’re useful. There’s no way in hell my apartment complex is going to install bike share racks outside each building, the scooters are useful precisely because other people will just leave one in the parking lot where I can take it and I can ride it all the way home.

            If my city was forced to put up return racks I guarantee the closest one would be by the bus stop, a 10 minute walk away.

            • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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              15 days ago

              functioning within the fantasyland where something that isn’t completely necessary for the techbro company to make a ‘profit’ is done at all, i think we can dream bigger than the inconveinient way things are already set up. more frequent drop-offs than bus stops, more frequent bus stops, drop-offs at common destinations we know lots of people will use them: public buildings, multifamily residences, etc.

              also obviously this could only actually work as a publicly owned and organized system

        • Edamamebean [she/her]@hexbear.net
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          15 days ago

          People don’t return them because proper scooter stands don’t exist lmao. Bike share systems actually have physical infrastructure showing where you’re supposed to return the bike. I worked for one of these scooter companies, “proper parking” was just somewhere on the sidewalk that isn’t obstructing traffic. These are solvable problems, not something inherent to electric scooters.

        • 7bicycles [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          15 days ago

          You occasionaly see one abandoned in a bush but usually people return them to the proper bike stands

          So they’re not free floating?

    • itappearsthat [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      15 days ago

      It really seems like your complaints are about kids doing kid shit but you know that is stupid so you launder them through complaints about newfangled contraptions

      • doublepepperoni [none/use name]@hexbear.netOP
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        15 days ago

        My main issue here is the business model, not the e-scooter itself

        I think easy access to essentially disposable motor vehicles incentivises stupid behaviour. If these were their own scooters I assume they’d treat them with more respect

              • doublepepperoni [none/use name]@hexbear.netOP
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                15 days ago

                Where I live I’ve seen a couple of abandoned rental bikes but typically people seem to use them properly. The people that use them seem to be mostly adults, though whether this is because of the app being more effectively age gated or the bikes being adult-sized, I’m not sure

                I also assume a bike is just less attractive for random joyrides

                Edit: they’re also less available, since you can only get them from docking stations spread around the city that you’re also supposed to return them to

        • 7bicycles [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          15 days ago

          My main issue here is the business model, not the e-scooter itself

          I don’t think the e-scooters business model is losing out on 2 paying customers as they pile 3 at a time onto one and then also those customers getting killed. I know they’re all run by bazinga tech companies but even that one’s too far

    • They do though??? They absolutely do. Children in particular. Fucking around on bikes is like one of the top things children do.

      They might do it a bit less with the rented bikes than the rented scooters but that’s just because most kids have their own bikes