Uberpie 〈TOP〉

If platforms like Uber keep 100% ownership, wealth concentrates. If UberPie models succeed, millions of workers become micro-capitalists.

By: Industry Analysis Desk

Until then, treat "UberPie" as a powerful thought experiment—not an investment opportunity. Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. No platform named "UberPie" is currently affiliated with Uber Technologies, Inc. uberpie

By 2028, a major gig platform will launch a limited UberPie pilot in a friendly regulatory zone (e.g., Wyoming or Dubai). If it survives the legal battles, it could reshape work as we know it. If platforms like Uber keep 100% ownership, wealth

Enter — a theoretical (and soon-to-be practical) model where workers don’t just perform tasks for a fee, but actually own a "slice" (pie) of the revenue stream generated by a fleet of assets or a network of labor. Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only

In the last decade, two economic models have dramatically reshaped how people earn money: the (Uber, DoorDash, TaskRabbit) and the fractional ownership economy (Rent the Runway, Pie-sharing, real estate crowdfunding). But what happens when you merge them?