After Washoe County District Court Judge Scott Freeman issued a preliminary injunction prohibiting Uber from operating statewide on Tuesday, the controversial ridesharing company decided to temporarily pull out of the Silver State.

"William," presumably a company spokesman, wrote in a late Wednesday blog post: "beginning tonight, nearly 1,000 jobs disappeared in Nevada and those residents lost their ability to earn a living. But, rest assured, Uber is in this for the long-term and we are committed to the people of the Silver State."

Uber spokeswoman Eva Behrend declined to respond to direct questions, referring Ars to the blog post.

After a rapid expansion worldwide, Uber has been butting heads with local regulators across North America and in Europe, where some authorities have found that the company is behaving like a taxi company and therefore should comply with taxi law. Uber wants regulators to bend local law to accommodate its business model. Most famously, the California Public Utilities Commission, which regulates taxis in the Golden State, created an entirely new class of transit for Uber and its competitors.

For its part, Uber generally maintains that it is not a transportation company, but rather a tech company that simply enables ridesharing—even though it pretty much looks, feels, and acts like a taxi company.

Earlier this month, the City of Toronto asked a local court to shut Uber down.