USA TODAY US Edition

Airbnb scammers charge fake reservatio­ns

Firm assailed for inaction says problems are rare

- Mike Snider

users may want to check their accounts even if they aren’t planning a trip anytime soon – some customers on the rental site have been scammed with reservatio­ns they didn’t make.

Account holders have been charged for non-refundable reservatio­ns at fake destinatio­n homes and in some cases, users report that money was taken from their bank and Paypal accounts.

Airbnb confirms that there have been some occurrence­s, but said in a statement sent to USA TODAY that “these are isolated incidents and at no point was the Airbnb platform compromise­d. We have robust systems in place to protect users’ accounts and our team of trust and safety experts work hard to constantly strengthen our defenses.”

Airbnb is working with those affected, company spokesman Charlie Urbanic said via email, “to help them secure their accounts and provide refunds after their log in details were compromise­d elsewhere, such as through a phishing email or malware.”

Users’ accounts, Airbnb says, were accessed with correct account login credential­s “compromise­d elsewhere.“

Airbnb has resolved a case in which UK-based communicat­ions profession­al Alice Chautard had three non-refundable reservatio­ns made in Kiev, Ukraine on her account Saturday, then the hacker canceled the reservatio­ns, and deleted the account that charged her “all within 2 minutes,” she said on Twitter.

Later, she noted that her Airbnb incident “has been sorted out ... and a refund was issued.”

Rachel Sheerin, a Charlotte, North Carolina-based sales keynote speaker who says she uses Airbnb about twice a month, said emails from Airbnb on Saturday “alerted me to charges, changes and my account being auto deleted,” she said in an email interview.

Her credit card had been charged three times for a total of about $1,500, then her account was deleted and her phone number changed – factors that made it hard for her to communicat­e with Airbnb.

“I immediatel­y went to my Airbnb app and tried to contact support to get the message that I have to have an account to access their support center,” she said. ‘The irony! They deleted my account and then provided no access to support.”

She got an email from Airbnb customer service after contacting the company’s Twitter help account and has been refunded one of the three charges. “I’ve emailed him back and am waiting on word for the other 2 charges,” Sheerin said.

“I travel internatio­nally a lot as a speaker and have loved Airbnb in the past,” she said. But “after this, I’m done with Airbnb not because I was hacked but because it was so difficult to get in touch with anyone, the response I got was subpar and there was no ownership of the issue. I had a credit card on my profile but what about all of the people who have their debit cards linked? Their cash is gone.”

Others are just as despondent, comAirbnb plaining about a lack of response by the company. One New York City Airbnb user said she would notify the Manhattan District Attorney’s office. “Your customer service isn’t helping,” she tweeted.

“This is a security issue and you should at least inform involved people about your procedures for this,” tweeted one person who said his bank account had been hit by an incident.

Airbnb noted that it has handled more than 500 million guest arrivals on Airbnb and “negative experience­s are extremely rare.”

The company offered some advice:

❚ Avoid unauthoriz­ed sites. Ensure that the address contains “https://” and doesn’t contain any odd characters or words. The main body of the address should simply read “airbnb.com.”

❚ Scrutinize emails. Be wary of those that ask you to click a link and enter personal informatio­n and emails with a sense of urgency.

❚ Watch where you are going. Make sure you stay on Airbnb’s secure platform throughout the entire process – through payment.

❚ Report issues. Let the company know about suspicious listings, emails or websites by emailing Airbnb at report.phishing@airbnb.com.

“We have robust systems in place to protect users’ accounts and our team of trust and safety experts work hard to constantly strengthen our defenses.” Airbnb

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