I'm also skeptical that the "let others use your car when you're not" ever becomes a major model.
Is capital so scarce that this is needed for services to operate? And is decentralized maintenance/cleaning really going to be more economical than centralized operations that benefit from economies of scale?
I don't know how the numbers work out, but if the parent commenter is correct that hardware costs are going to be a bottleneck, it seems reasonable to me that essentially crowdfunding a global deployment would be a way to address that. It could accelerate the rollout and provide economies of scale more quickly than Waymo alone footing the bill, and wouldn't preclude them from still additionally investing their own capital.
Aside from that, it seems like there would be some demand for ownership of autonomous vehicles from people who either don't want to rent them out or only want to do so part-time, and selling the vehicles directly to tap into that would help further increase the scale of both production and robotaxiing.
During this period, it seems like a huge risk for a robotaxi company to play it "fast and loose" with car quality or maintenance. You'd want to maintain exceptional standards on anything safety-critical, and that means you don't want to be seen as outsourcing critical hardware purchases and maintenance to random sole-proprietor businesses. (Maybe somewhere down the line this will change, when the tech is so advanced and accepted that anyone can offer it.)
Obviously I might be wrong. Maybe capital is going to become so tight that it'll be hard for the Waymos of the world to scale up quickly? But at least for the first, say, 7 years of major expansion it feels like safety and quality are going to dominate the conversation.