If there ever is a TTIP, and if it has ISDS, would Uber have a case against the actions of various EU member states based on this:
Uber Technologies Inc., which has faced a mounting regulatory backlash to its rapid growth in Europe, said this week it had filed complaints with regulators in Brussels against France, Germany and Spain. It claims those countries have violated EU laws requiring service providers to be treated in a nondiscriminatory way by seeking to ban some of Uber's services.
"This is supposed to be a single market," said Mark McGann, Uber's head of public policy for Europe, the Middle East and Africa. "What we're finding is that we're getting treated in completely different ways in different countries, and even within individual countries."
That doesn't sound very fair and equitable. It will be interesting to see what EU law has to say about the issue.