Um... you're presuming a fixed supply of uber cars. This simply is not true, especially in the medium/long term.
Raising prices amidst extreme demand is a good way to maximize profit on the supply you do have, but expanding your supply to fulfill demand is almost certainly the better course in the long run.
Uber is dropping their fares only for the duration of the taxi strike, ostensibly to make sure "ordinary folks can get around the city while the taxi drivers strike to get a fair deal."
During the strike (viz., the 'short term') there will likely be a shortage of cars, including uber cars. Lowering their prices will only make it harder to get an uber car during the strike.
I think you are right. But that does not mean that this isn't in Uber's interest. Normally, it's not in any business's interest to lower prices to the point where you don't have enough capacity. That would be leaving money by the curbside that you can readily grab, and it would not even be particularly useful for your customers, because your product still needs to be allocated and customers end up spending time and effort to get their slice if they cannot simply buy it. But that reasoning assumes that everybody who might like your product already knows about it. And that simply isn't true for Uber, which is why they need all the marketing they can get; and what better marketing than this. The fact that they are rubbing up against a popular-in-SF (if batty) trade unionist ideology only makes it better, because that will mean more newspaper coverage.
It looks like we're arguing about different things.
Someone brought up that Uber cars are already hard to book (strike or no strike), and my point was that instead of raising prices to maximize profit, one would be much better served to expand the fleet instead.
In any case, even in the context of the strike, presumably Uber has longer-term plans than just tomorrow - raising their prices, while following the laws of supply/demand, is going to smack of gouging, and will naturally do far more damage in the long run than whatever extra profit they can derive.
Raising prices amidst extreme demand is a good way to maximize profit on the supply you do have, but expanding your supply to fulfill demand is almost certainly the better course in the long run.