Compare security governance provisions between Uber and DoorDash. Provisions are extracted from monitored governance documents and classified by severity.
The collection of government identification data enables Uber to perform identity verification and background screening processes required for onboarding and ongoing compliance with regulatory and tax obligations. This data collection supports the operational infrastructure necessary for driver and delivery partner qualification.
Consumer impact
Drivers and delivery partners must provide government-issued identification documents and Social Security numbers as a condition of platform participation. The terms authorize Uber to retain and process this information for verification, screening, tax reporting, and legal compliance purposes.
Opt-out available
No opt-out available
Actual clause text
Uber collects government-issued identification documents from drivers and delivery people, including driver's licenses, passport details, and Social Security numbers or equivalent government identification numbers. This information is used for identity verification, background checks, tax reporting obligations, and compliance with legal requirements.
AI-extracted from source document. Verify against original for legal use.
No Security clause found in our archive for this platform.
AI Difference AnalysisProfessional
Stripe's arbitration clause is narrower than Amazon's in one key respect: it includes a small claims court carve-out that Amazon's clause does not. PayPal's clause is the most aggressive of the three, explicitly waiving jury trial rights in addition to class action rights. From a compliance perspective, Amazon presents the lowest risk for B2B contracts while PayPal creates the highest exposure for consumer-facing applications subject to CFPB oversight.