Airbnb to verify listings as deadly incident prompts safety move
Five people were killed and others wounded in a shooting at a residence, which had been rented on the platform.
Airbnb. Picture: John MacDougall / AFP
Airbnb said Wednesday it would verify all seven million of its listings worldwide after a deadly shooting at one of its California homes fuelled fresh safety concerns about the lodging platform.
Chief executive and co-founder Brian Chesky said the home-sharing service decided on new steps as part of an effort to instill more trust in Airbnb.
“By December 15, 2020, every home and every host on Airbnb will be reviewed with the objective of 100% verification,” he said in an email to employees.
“We believe that trust on the internet begins with verifying the accuracy of the information on internet platforms, and we believe that this is an important step for our industry.”
He said that addresses, photos and other details on Airbnb listings will be verified for accuracy and that “those that meet our high expectations will be clearly labelled”.
The move is aimed at weeding out what Chesky called “bad actors”, and referenced the case of a so-called “party house” in Orinda, California.
Five people were killed and others wounded in a Thursday night shooting at the residence, which had been rented on the platform.
More than 100 people were present at the event, which was announced on social media.
‘Innovating on trust’
“We are not infallible,” Chesky said in a Twitter message.
“We are a platform built on a foundation of trust. We need to continue innovating on trust to make it harder for the bad actors. The trust of our community is our top priority.”
He said the platform would set up a staffed 24/7 “neighbour hotline” where anyone could call for safety concerns, and had asked for consulting from two former police chiefs.
He said that starting next month, Airbnb would rebook customers or issue refunds “if upon checking into a listing it does not meet our accuracy standards”.
He added: “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.”
To address unauthorised house parties, Chesky said Airbnb would expand “manual screening of high-risk reservations flagged by our risk detection models” to North America and globally.
The move comes a week after Vice News reported what it called a scam using a loophole in the Airbnb system to trick customers into changing their reservation to a non-existent listing.
The report said the Vice journalist accidentally uncovered a scheme affecting at least eight cities and nearly 100 property listings.
Airbnb, one of the largest of the “sharing economy” platforms with operations in some 190 countries, has said it would go public in 2020 with a valuation estimated as high as $35 billion.
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