Skip to main content

It took Uber five years to reach 1 billion rides, Chinese rival reaches milestone in one

uber settles driver background check case man driving in car the city ride share lyft getaround zipcar
Lightpoet/Shutterstock
Uber recently announced one billion rides since its 2009 launch. That sounds massive, until you hear that Didi Kuaidi, a rival taxi service in China, managed 1.43 billion rides in 2015 alone.

Didi Kuaidi is Uber’s worst nightmare, a merger between Didi Dache and Kuaidi Dache designed to make it near impossible for any foreign taxi service to win market share. In the past year, Didi Kuaidi has cemented its position in China, holding 80 percent of the private car hire market and 99 percent of the taxi hailing market in the country.

Recommended Videos

Even with the higher amount of rides last year, Didi Kuaidi is only valued at a quarter of Uber’s current valuation, which is apparently $62.5 billion. This is most likely due to Didi Kuaidi staying in one country, while Uber expands to 70 countries.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Didi Kuaidi is starting to branch out of China, investing in Lyft, India’s Ola, and Southeast Asia’s GrabTaxi. However, these partnerships can only go so far, and if Didi Kuaidi truly wants to take on Uber it needs to become active in more countries.

Last year, the company raised $4.4 billion, with major investors like Softbank, Tencent, and Alibaba getting involved.

These investments seem more like alliances, after Tencent blocked Uber on WeChat. Uber managed to bag one key alliance with Baidu, but the prominence of the search engine is starting to fade as Chinese Internet users spend more time shopping, messaging, or using social media.

Interestingly, even with the small percentage market share, Uber claims 30 percent of all its trips are in China. Uber is also looking into splitting its Chinese branch from the main company, to win more customers, though it might need more than a split, according to The Information.

David Curry
Former Digital Trends Contributor
David has been writing about technology for several years, following the latest trends and covering the largest events. He is…
One of the worst smart rings we reviewed in 2024 is getting a successor
Circular Ring 2 in Gold.

In the world of wearables, it seems that smart rings have reached peak popularity in the last couple of years. Though the Oura Ring is still the gold standard, that’s not stopping competitors like Circular, which just announced its next-generation Circular Ring 2 at CES 2025.

In 2024, our own Andy Boxall reviewed the original Circular Ring Slim, as well as a revised version that came out several months later. However, he wasn’t very impressed with the Circular Ring Slim, as it had several flaws and only got a 1.5/5 rating. Circular clearly had its work cut out for it, and thankfully, the Circular Ring 2 sounds like an improvement.

Read more
This crazy smart mirror will tell you who’s the healthiest of them all
The Withings Omnia smart mirror concept.

Withings’ futuristic Omnia mirror will tell you everything you need to know about your health and well-being, and probably some things you'd rather ignore right after the recent festive period, just by standing in front of it. It is aimed at cleverly bringing together its own data with information collected from Withings’ range of connected health devices, such as the Withings ScanWatch 2 smartwatch, to provide what it calls a “360-degree view of your vital indicators.”

Omnia collates an impressive 60 different health and fitness parameters, with the 360-degree part of the explanation coming from scans performed by the connected base, other Withings products, and information collected from other sources. Data ranges from your body composition and weight to sleep quality and lung capacity, and it’s all presented on the mirror itself — right in front of you.

Read more
Halliday’s fact-checking smart glasses have a screen and a crazy control system
A model wearing the Halliday AI Glasses and smart ring.

Smart glasses and smart rings are two of the biggest current wearable tech trends, so it makes sense for there to be various new examples of both at CES 2025. What new product would be complete without a big dollop of AI inside?

Newcomer Halliday has unexpectedly brought all three of these trends together into one fascinating product for the technology trade show, and Digital Trends had a conversation with the company’s co-founder, Carter Hou, to find out more.
Like nothing we’ve seen before
Halliday AI Glasses Halliday

Read more