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Lime scooter-sharing startup suspended in Switzerland as a glitch sends riders flying

Scooter-sharing startup Lime pulled its scooters from the streets of Switzerland, following a glitch that caused users to be thrown from their rides.
Uber Lime

Scooter-sharing startup Lime has reportedly pulled its scooters from the streets of Switzerland, following a glitch that caused the front wheel of its scooters to lock up and users to be thrown from their rides, with some suffering serious injuries.

According to a TechCrunch report, Lime has removed its fleets of electric scooters from the cities of Basel and Zurich for safety checks, as it investigates the possibility of a safety fault.

The move follows several reports of scooters spontaneously rebooting during rides, causing the anti-theft system to come into play, meaning the front wheels have locked up mid-scoot.

An excerpt from a complaint (written in English) published in Swiss media shows one Lime user claiming their scooterโ€™s brakes stopped working shortly before the front wheel locked up.

โ€œThis way, Iโ€™ve been thrown off the scooter at 25kph. Iโ€™m in the hospital right now,โ€ the complaint reads.

The rider goes on to question why the front wheel would be locked โ€œwhen the scooter is unlocked, rented and pairedโ€, before asking Lime to analyse their scooter data.

โ€œThis kind of incident can kill people. Or paralize. Or break bones, at least,โ€ the rider wrote.

Limeโ€™s scooters have a top speed of just under 30kph.

In a statement issued to Swiss customers, translated by TechCrunch from the original German, Lime said it has received reports of โ€œsudden brake maneuvers โ€ฆ leading to crashesโ€.

In the statement, Lime suggests a software update could have caused the scooters to reboot in the middle of rides.

โ€œWe have already taken measures to ensure this will never happen again. Nonetheless, we are testing each device thoroughly to ensure that no software or hardware issues remain,โ€ the statement said.

Lime scooters have recently entered Australia, hitting the streets of Brisbane. However, there have been no reports of injuries here as of yet.

The California-headquartered e-bike and scooter-sharing startup raised $US335 million ($454.08 million) in July last year, including a โ€œsizeable investmentโ€ from ride-sharing giant Uber.

The e-scooter revolution is gaining speed globally. Just last month, San Francisco startup Spin was acquired by car manufacturer Ford for a reported $140 million, just two years after it launched.

Elsewhere, scooter-sharing startup Bird has launched a platform allowing other startups and small businesses to manage their own branded scooter fleets.

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