A Reddit user claiming to be a whistleblower from a food-delivery app posted a viral rant alleging the company exploited drivers and users through legal loopholes, a claim later exposed as an AI-generated hoax by Platformer journalist Casey Newton.
The user described writing the post while drunk at a library, relying on public Wi-Fi to detail the company’s practices. He accused the firm of stealing drivers’ tips and wages with impunity by exploiting legal gaps. “You guys always suspect the algorithms are rigged against you, but the reality is actually so much more depressing than the conspiracy theories,” the poster stated in the Reddit thread.
Such allegations carried weight due to prior industry issues. DoorDash faced a lawsuit for stealing tips from drivers, culminating in a $16.75 million settlement. This history lent initial plausibility to the anonymous claims, despite the poster’s fabricated narrative.
The thread rapidly gained traction on Reddit, accumulating over 87,000 upvotes and reaching the site’s front page. Cross-posted to X, it attracted 208,000 likes and generated 36.8 million impressions across platforms.
holy fucking shit pic.twitter.com/hLU3aZqY7c
— Jesse (@d0wnsideofme) January 2, 2026
Casey Newton, journalist at Platformer, reached out to the Reddit poster following the post’s spread. The user then contacted Newton via Signal, sharing supporting materials. These included a photograph appearing to show an UberEats employee badge and an 18-page internal document. The document purportedly outlined the company’s AI system for calculating a “desperation score” for individual drivers, assessing their financial need to influence operations.
Newton pursued verification of the whistleblower’s identity and documents. During this process, discrepancies emerged, revealing the entire account as bait in an AI-generated hoax. The effort involved crafting realistic artifacts to deceive scrutiny.
Reflecting on the incident, Newton observed that earlier in his career, the materials would have appeared highly credible. “For most of my career up until this point, the document shared with me by the whistleblower would have seemed highly credible in large part because it would have taken so long to put together,” he wrote. He questioned the motive: “Who would take the time to put together a detailed, 18-page technical document about market dynamics just to troll a reporter? Who would go to the trouble of creating a fake badge?”





