Bangkok Post

Airbnb to verify all 7 million properties to improve trust

- DEE-ANN DURBIN

Airbnb says it will spend the next year verifying that all seven million of its listings are accurate and that the homes and rooms being offered for short-term stays meet basic quality standards.

It’s one of several moves the San Francisco-based company is making to improve user trust and make it easier for guests, hosts and others to report problems and obtain refunds when things go awry.

The changes come after a rough week for Airbnb.

Last Thursday, a shooting at an unauthoris­ed Halloween party in an Airbnb rental in Orinda, California, left five people dead.

A Vice story, meanwhile, revealed a scam by Airbnb hosts who put guests up at inferior properties after claiming the ones they initially booked weren’t available.

Guests told Vice they had trouble obtaining refunds from the company and were given bad reviews by the shady hosts.

And on Tuesday, voters in Jersey City, New Jersey, approved restrictio­ns on short-term rental companies in a referendum in one of Airbnb’s most important markets.

In an e-mail sent to employees on Wednesday, Airbnb co-founder and CEO Brian Chesky said the company would take its most significan­t steps to improve trust since its founding in 2008.

“People need to feel like they can trust our community and that they can trust Airbnb when something goes wrong,’’ he wrote.

Airbnb plans to:

Verify all listings on its platform for accuracy of photos, address and other details. They will also be verified for quality standards, including cleanlines­s, safety and basic amenities. Those that meet Airbnb’s quality expectatio­ns will be labelled.

Airbnb said every listing would be reviewed by Dec 15, 2020.

Beginning Dec 15, Airbnb said it would rebook guests to a new listing or refund their money if a property doesn’t meet its accuracy standards.

By Dec 31, Airbnb will launch a 24-hour hotline staffed by a rapid response team in the US so neighbours, guests and others can report a problem. The hotline will roll out globally over the course of next year.

The company has asked Charles Ramsey, the former chief of police for

Philadelph­ia and Washington, and Ronald Davis, the former chief of police for East Palo Alto, California, to act as advisers and help train the response team.

Beginning Dec 15, Airbnb will be expanding manual checks of “high-risk’’ reservatio­ns flagged by its system to cut down on unauthoris­ed parties. One-night reservatio­ns at large homes will get extra scrutiny, for example.

Airbnb stresses that it doesn’t consider race, profile pictures, gender or nationalit­y when assessing the risk associated with a reservatio­n.

The company is under some pressure to improve its reputation as it eyes an initial public offering of stock next year.

“Most hosts do a great job, but guests need to feel like Airbnb has their back, and we believe this commitment is a necessary step in giving guests peace of mind,’’ Chesky wrote.

But critics of the company say its efforts don’t go far enough.

“If Airbnb really wants to be a good neighbour, it would verify that listings are complying with local regulation­s,’’ said Jessica Black, who leads a Texas group called Moms Against STRS, which backs regulation of short-term rentals.

“By not voluntaril­y removing illegal listings, Airbnb continues to outsource the costs of their business to cash-strapped cities,’’ she said.

 ??  ?? Chesky: Steps to boost trust
Chesky: Steps to boost trust

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