The reason why VCs were willing to do that was that they anticipated that Uber (in particular) would monopolize ride-sharing. After that, they intended to replace the drivers (who are still the most expensive part of the ride) with self-driving cars. I spoke with a Google employee, about two years ago, who told me that everyone in the self-driving business hoped to have some big advances ready by 2021.
Turns out that autonomous vehicles are a lot harder than anticipated, so the ride-share companies have had to pivot. That explains Uber Eats.
As sketchy as Uber has been, I have no sympathy for the traditional taxi cab companies. They refused to adapt in the face of a new situation staring them in the face. The New York City medallion-owners just expected to continue farming from the cab drivers with zero effort. Parasites.
I spoke with a guy who had recently come to America and needed a ride. His friends couldn't drive him, for some reason, so they tried to arrange a cab. While they bickered, trying to find a cab company phone number, this guy downloaded the Uber app, punched in his credit card info, and his ride showed up before his friends had finished finding a cab company.
Nevertheless, Uber is a sketchy company and desperately needs regulation.
But you get charged only $10. Uber has already eaten $5 of the fare for you. That money has to come from somewhere. The 30% they take on the $10 isn't covering what they've already knocked off the price.
That money has to come from somewhere. That somewhere is the VC.
The 30% they take is really only stemming the bleeding.