The Borneo Post

Airbnb’s San Francisco showdown may set rules on gig economy

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AIRBNB Inc. has a message for cities that try to enforce rules that crimp its couch- surfing style: See you in court.

The world’s fourth-most valuable startup is testing a legal strategy against its home town that may be a template for sharing- economy firms to fend off regulation. Because it operates on the internet, Airbnb argues, it can’t be held responsibl­e if users skirt local laws. Airbnb sued San Francisco in June after it enacted a measure barring home- sharing platforms from collecting booking fees from hosts who haven’t registered their units with the city. Airbnb also sued beach-front Santa Monica in Southern California and is threatenin­g to sue New York over a state bill awaiting the governor’s signature. Anaheim, home to Disneyland, dropped its effort to regulate Airbnb less than two weeks after it was sued by the company.

Companies arguing they’re merely platforms, not service businesses, isn’t novel. Uber deploys that defence against regulators in battles over everything from paying drivers to determinin­g who’s responsibl­e when passengers get hurt.

Airbnb has added a twist by taking the offensive, asserting that a 20-year- old US law shields it from liability tied to users in the same way EBay isn’t responsibl­e for sales of bootleg recordings or Stubhub for scalped tickets. Airbnb’s online transactio­ns and fees are protected by the Communicat­ions Decency Act of 1996 because they are “part and parcel” of its service, it says.

A federal judge voiced scepticism last Thursday about Airbnb’s argument, saying he was struggling to understand why the company thinks it should be given immunity from local regulation as a publisher of someone else’s content.

Congress, in enacting the Communicat­ions Decency Act, wasn’t permitting “a lawless no man’s land just because it’s on the internet,” US District Judge James Donato said during a hearing on the company’s request to block San Francisco’s law from taking effect. The hearing ended without a ruling.

While the court battle springs from the city’s overheated housing market, the stakes are much broader.

Airbnb, with a valuation of US$ 30 billion ( RM120 billion), has garnered support from competitor Expedia’s HomeAway, as well as a group representi­ng Amazon.com, Facebook and Google. The Internet Associatio­n, whose members also include Uber and ride-hailing rival Lyft, says the dispute has widerangin­g implicatio­ns for free speech on the internet.

San Francisco says the company’s attack on the law is absurd because it isn’t intended to police what rental hosts upload to the website. The ordinance “regulates only conduct – an unlawful commercial transactio­n, not speech,” the city contends. “Airbnb and HomeAway attempt to stretch both the Communicat­ions Decency Act and the First Amendment beyond all reasonable bounds,” the city said in a court filing. The companies wrongly claim that “because their business is online, they are immune from any regulation of their commercial transactio­ns.”

It’s a tough call who has the stronger argument, said Michael Risch, a professor at Villanova University School of Law in Pennsylvan­ia.

“If Airbnb wins, we will likely see more companies making arguments that generally applicable regulation is barred by the Communicat­ions Decency Act,” he said.

With San Francisco’s median rent for a one-bedroom apartment at US$ 3,550 a month, some landlords are evicting tenants to pursue even more profitable short-term rentals. The city loosened a long-time ban on converting residentia­l units for short-term use last year, while requiring hosts to register.

When the vast majority of hosts failed to comply, the city imposed a fine of up to US$ 1,000 a day on rental platforms for every unregister­ed host, plus possible misdemeano­r charges. After Airbnb sued, the city softened the ordinance to fine the companies only when a stay is booked in an unregister­ed unit.

Eight in 10 rental units in the city aren’t registered and Airbnb is profiting from them, said David Campos, one of 10 members of the city’s Board of Supervisor­s who unanimousl­y approved the revised penalties in June. “Airbnb didn’t create the housing crisis, but it certainly has exacerbate­d it,” he said. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Castro Street in San Francisco on May 7, 2015. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Castro Street in San Francisco on May 7, 2015. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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