We do not have a gofundme or online merch store and if we did we'd make better merch #weekOfCone
Cruise Robotaxi Smashed With A Hammer By A Masked Individual In San Fransisco

The attack was focused on the autonomous Cruise's roof-mounted sensors, which were hit with what looks like a hammer

Carscoops

@webuiltthiscity I designed these stickers a few months back in honor of the #WeekOfCone project that @SafeStreetRebel were running.

My illustration is CC-BY licensed, so anyone can print it out and distribute it as they please. I've seen at least 3 versions of this sticker out in the wild, so it looks like people are putting them up liberally. Folks can download the image here https://docpop.org/2023/09/print-your-own-coned-stickers-to-protest-self-driving-cars/

Print Your Own "ConeSF" Stickers To Protest Self-Driving Cars - Doc Pop's Blog

Back in 2014, a New York Times article repeated Uber and Lyft’s wild claims that ride-sharing services could lead to cheaper rides, more housing, less greenhouse emissions, and even better public funding for mass-transit. Ten years later and we can clearly see that these ride-sharing services have actually made these problems worse. In San Francisco, […]

Doc Pop's Blog
It's so nice that folks keep leaving these cones around the neighborhood. #WeekOfCone #ConeSF

Print Your Own “ConeSF” Stickers To Protest Self-Driving Cars

Back in 2014, a New York Times article repeated Uber and Lyft’s wild claims that ride-sharing services could lead to cheaper rides, more housing, less greenhouse emissions, and even better public funding for mass-transit.

Ten years later and we can clearly see that these ride-sharing services have actually made these problems worse. In San Francisco, for example, Uber and Lyft have caused a 40% increase in traffic congestion. More traffic means more emissions. These companies also fought regulations to fairly pay their drivers, meaning most of Uber and Lyft drivers can’t even afford to live in the city they work in. Meaning these drivers have to commute into the city from further and further away… which leads to more traffic congestion.

Now huge companies like Google and GM are repeating these wild claims when they hype up their self-driving car services. GM thinks the solution to San Francisco’s car problem is more cars? What a surprise.

A few months back, a group of activists called SafeStreetRebels organized ConeSF and the #WeekOfCone, where they showed how easily these cars can be disabled by simply putting a traffic cone on their hood. If you follow the local news, you know these cars don’t need any cones to suddenly stop working while on our streets, but the ConeSF protest helped bring scrutiny to the impact these self-driving cars were having on our city.

As a fan of SafeStreetRebels actions, I designed some “coned car” illustrations that anyone can print up and distribute as they wish. These stickers are CC-BY Doc Pop, so you can print them, sell them, give them away, or stick them on whatever you want. Please share attribution when possible, but you don’t need to print it on the stickers.

Transparent Version (CC-BY Doc Pop)on green background (CC-BY Doc Pop)Background, no outline (CC-BY Doc Pop)Transparent Version, thicker outline (CC-BY Doc Pop)

I’ve seen green ones, holographic ones, and glittery ones. As far as printers, I’m a fan of Sticker Ninja, Sticky Brand, and Sticker Giant, but there are plenty of other options out there. I’d recommend a 3″ wide sticker, custom shaped, on a glitter holographic background. Like the ones below:

These are awesome! #WeekOfCone

— Doctor M. Popular (@docpop) 2023-07-17T20:35:26.589Z

Update:

Here’s a version of this illustration for Waymo vehicles.

#WeekOfCone

With Uber, Less Reason to Own a Car

Ride-sharing services have the potential to change the way people get around cities — and could help lower emissions and free up space for housing.

The New York Times

AV companies partner with police and serve as tools of mass surveillance. A city-wide, moving network observing and analyzing everything that happens outdoors is something out of a dystopian movie, not a democratic society.

Robotaxi companies have made big promises about accessibility, but their actions show their true values. Their cars are not wheelchair accessible and do not pull up to the curb. Paratransit is accountable to the public, but Cruise & Waymo are only accountable to shareholders.

#weekOfCone

ConeSF is so back, and this time, along with coning robotaxis, we're asking you to demand that the state finally reign in Cruise and Waymo.

Here’s how - https://www.safestreetrebel.com/robotaxis/

#sfPol #bikeTooter #transit #weekOfCone

ConeSF: A Campaign to Rein In Robotaxis

ConeSF: our campaign to rein In robotaxis

Safe Street Rebel
@phantomspacegirl ha! Reminds me a little of @SafeStreetRebel's #WeekOfCone (disabling self-driving cars by simply putting a traffic cone on the hood)