When you’re out in any city in India, you can see delivery drivers darting around on their bikes, around the clock – on highways and along smaller gullies, zigzagging through the oppressive traffic and nimbly evading the blind spots of the loud, rickety buses. Drivers’ loyalties (to one of around three to four major platforms) are easily discernible from the colour of their respective uniforms and delivery gear. Asking drivers to wear these uniforms is a somewhat sneaky manoeuvre by platforms, because they don’t technically employ the drivers. In fact, in other countries this practice has gotten platforms in trouble because platform workers have used it to argue that platforms control how they work as they would employees while not classifying them as such. All in all, however, no one frets much about having to wear a uniform, as this concern pales next to the other facts of this work – the daily risks, the precarious income, the uncertainty of having work the next day, or the next week.