Rise and Shine is a regular morning roundup of links. Tips if you’ve got ‘em.
- What if Google had attempted to re-create public transit instead of working away on a driverless car?
- Yelp urges the American Legislative Exchange Council, better known as ALEC, to advocate a law that would limit lawsuits over bad reviews.
- Streetsblog’s Brad Aaron thinks that NYCEDC’s Seth Pinsky dodged the question on parking.
- Code for India happens.
- San Francisco authorities don’t seem all that clear on what the parking rules for food trucks actually are.
- Why aren’t we designing housing for single people?
- All of Rutgers’ “grease trucks” seem to have found new homes.
- Airbnb gets glowing Business Insider coverage for what it says it’s doing — “insane lengths”! — for wronged customers.
- Perhaps the folks in Silver Lake haven’t heard, because those Los Angelenos are considering banning Airbnb from their neighborhood.
- San Francisco PD is tweet shaming bike thieves.
- Inside New York City bike share’s “perpetual race” to redistribute its cycles faster than people put them in the wrong place.
- South Seattle wants to know where its bike lanes are.
- And some aren’t convinced that the data shows Detroit has no choice but to cut pensions.
Nancy Scola is a Washington, DC-based journalist whose work tends to focus on the intersections of technology, politics, and public policy. Shortly after returning from Havana she started as a tech reporter at POLITICO.