Not exactly. Vanpool is a mainstay of metropolitan commuting in the United States but it's an implementation that's well behind the times. Check out Seattle's for an example. Basically the way it currently works is: 1) The city buys a bunch of vans 2) You round up a bunch of people whose commute is similar to yours 3) You apply for the city to loan you a van 4) You become a bus driver for whoever is on your vanpool 5) profit Right now it's subsidized by a varying patchwork of city, state and federal funds (if I'm not mistaken). Chariot, which I'd never heard of, apparently goes through Steps 1 through 4 for you and takes (5) for itself. It's one of those forehead-smacking ideas: vanpool works gangbusters but setting up vanpool is a bitch. Chariot (and now Ford) are basically saying "we'll do that for a living" and using the already-available subisidies to increase profits and undercut the rideshares. 'cuz here's the thing about rideshare: it's versatile and handy. But here's the thing about rideshare: there's no advantage in giving up the versatility. If you're going to the same place five days a week and staying there for eight or nine hours, vanpool is the way to go. And if you're Chariot, the fact that you've got 100 vans instead of 1 actually allows you to offer more wriggle room on scheduling and routing. This is a company that deserves to win. The money is already there. Their service is basically expediting an already desired civic effect. They're competing in an open arena with no monopoly concerns - theoretically, a city could still buy the vans and lease it to whomever wanted to play. It's actually really exciting.