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Delumine | 2 years ago

It feels to me that AirBNB hosts are an entitled group of people. They want all the benefits of renting out their place (in most cases, it goes against the original intent of renting a spare room, or family home), but want to make the experience less than ideal for customers. There's a multitude of rules, chores, invasions of privacy (Cameras, decibel monitors, et al).

These are supposed to be vacations, not a walking-on-eggshells experience because the host is constantly spying on you. If there's damage, submit a claim against the person.

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lawlessone|2 years ago

In a lot of countries many of the hosts are violating zoning laws and evading tax to.

A lot of people are getting very tired of being subjected to weekend after weekend of stags and hen parties because the neighboring apartment was turned into a hotel room.

Not to mention the extra pressure it's put on property and rents.

Delumine|2 years ago

I agree. AirBNB was a mistake. It used to be that an apartment could be rented out for a decent amount above your mortgage, and expenses. But now there's no incentive to opt for long-term rentals, when a short-term one is more profitable.

Then the rich get richer and consolidate more properties under their companies, leaving the rest to fend for themselves. Think of people who had been making sacrifices so they could save up to purchase something, just to be outbid by collective groups of people just purchasing property to rent them out. There's no competing.

giantg2|2 years ago

Secret recording is also a serious crime in most jurisdictions.

I wonder if nuisance laws can be used against the host if repeated violations are coming from the same property, even if the renter is different.

rayiner|2 years ago

> They want all the benefits of renting out their place (in most cases, it goes against the original intent of renting a spare room, or family home), but want to make the experience less than ideal for customers.

In the first part of that sentence you characterize the transaction as akin to renting out a spare room, but in the second part you characterize the guests as "customers." Historically, if you rented a room from someone, you were subject to all sorts of rules, invasions of privacy, etc. In many circumstances, that's still the case (e.g. with live-in nannies).

What's actually happening is that guests treat AirBnBs like hotel rooms, and hosts are doing the same thing. It's just a commercial, arm's-length transaction.

Delumine|2 years ago

Exactly, in the former situation you obviously don't have a full expectation of privacy. But when you're paying a premium for an entire property, onerous rules and spying are uncalled for.

jlarocco|2 years ago

We already have a solution, and they're called hotels.

Society forgot why hotels were created, so now we're re-learning it via AirBnB.

JoshTriplett|2 years ago

"Hotels" does not solve "I'd like to stay in an isolated cabin in the countryside", or various other things that are readily available on vacation rental sites.

(AirBnB has lots of other problems, but "hotels" alone are not a complete replacement for what it provides.)

giantg2|2 years ago

Yeah, and this rule change won't change any of those problems. We can already see that the prior rules were being ignored by the problem hosts.

olliej|2 years ago

Yup.

I have never had an Airbnb that was not clearly an illegal hotel.