LONDON (AP) — The Latest on Uber’s court case on worker rights in Britain (all times local):

4:30 p.m.

Taxi hailing app Uber says it will appeal a British Court of Appeal ruling that determined drivers should be classed as workers in a case with broad implications for the gig economy. 

The company says in a statement Wednesday that the decision was not unanimous “and does not reflect the reasons why the vast majority of drivers choose to use the Uber app.”

The decision sets up a showdown in Britain’s Supreme Court over whether the drivers are workers, not independent contractors and therefore should receive the minimum wage and paid holidays. 

Uber says that “if drivers were classified as workers they would inevitably lose some of the freedom and flexibility that comes with being their own boss.”

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4:00 p.m.

Lawyers say the taxi hailing app Uber has lost its appeal against a ruling that its drivers should be classed as workers in a case with broad implications for the gig economy.

Law firm Leigh Day says Britain’s Court of Appeal upheld an earlier ruling that found the company’s drivers are workers, not independent contractors and therefore should receive the minimum wage and paid holidays. Uber is expected to appeal.

Though the company argued that the case applies to only two drivers, Uber has tens of thousands of drivers in the U.K. who could argue they deserve the same status as the former drivers covered by decision. The court says some 40,000 drivers use the platform in the U.K., though the company said the number had grown since the submission to 50,000.

San Francisco-based Uber has expanded rapidly around the world by offering an alternative to traditional taxis through a smartphone app that links people in need of rides with drivers of private cars. That has drawn protests from taxi drivers who say Uber and similar services are able to undercut them.