Airbnb To Hand Over Data On 124 Hosts To New York Attorney General
Peer-to-peer lodging service Airbnb has agreed to hand over data on 124 of its hosts in New York as part of an investigation by the state's Attorney General into the operation of illegal hotels. The AG first requested data for almost all of Airbnb's hosts in the state, but after "legal wrangling," that number was whittled down to the current 124. The data in question will be unredacted personal information, meaning names and addresses. In a blog post, Airbnb's David Hantman said, "nothing about these hosting profiles suggests [the Attorney General] is after anyone but individuals who may be flagrantly misusing our platform." Airbnb is confident that the targets of this request are hosts considered to be "bad actors," but they don't explain what classifies somebody as a "bad actor."
It's whoever we say and whoever doesn't have the means to buy us.
Pain is merely failure leaving the body
More like legal bullshit from last-century companies that need laws to protect them against innovation in order to stay competitive.
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
Every time I see a story like this or the problems Tesla has in NY, I can't help but think of the "New York is open for business" commercials flooded on the TV news channels. One of the most taxed and regulated states in the nation claiming to be business friendly.
Fuck Noo Yawk.
depends on the situation. There is government being overly strict/arseholes, then there is government doing what it is supposed to do, which is ensuring hotels are all following the regulations required for hotels. If they are doing the former then it sucks, but I suspect it is the later they are chasing. I personally find it hard to fault them if what they are doing is chasing people that are blatantly ignoring the laws for insurance, health and safety etc when it comes to hotel accommodation.
I know of one actual Bed and Breakfast that takes in normal clients through one set of ads, and runs other ads in BDSM magazines and such and serves as a dungeon for that clientel. They apparently rely on not scheduling people who don't know what's in the basement at the same time as those who do or something like that - maybe weekends are for whipsters. Is it possible this counts as a "bad actor"?
Or what about people who are subletting property they only rent, against their rental agreement? Not that that's right, but I could certainly see the New York state authorities focusing only on those cases and ignoring a lot of owner landlords who rent out unsafe property, or worse, the ones who use goons to frighten or actually beat people who are protected from price increases by rent control, to force them to break their leases and free the property to be rented at a higher rate. Leaning on little old ladies is a pretty blatent kind of 'bad acting", but is it even on the radar in this case, or is it all about getting the low hanging fruit of renters who generally can't afford lawyers rather than landlords who can?.
Who is John Cabal?
It isn't innovation to simply ignore local accommodation laws. If ignoring the law is innovation then I think a lot of people would like their prison sentences reduced as after all they were just innovating.
...for establishing a system of competition based on government regulation rather than quality of goods and services. I'm sure harassing 124 small time hosts will help the big players, who line the pockets of politicians with contributions, scare off hundreds more. And of course, since New York has no other crimes to look into, this is a perfectly prioritized use of limited prosecutorial resources. /sarc
First we had the #warondrugs, now we have the #waronunlicensedhotels?
I believe it's essentially about someone running what is essentially a hotel without paying the taxes that hotels are supposed to pay.
See http://www.balloon-juice.com/2...
My sig will be released in 2015 third quarter. Rating pending.
at the Bates Hotel
It's similar to Uber's situation with individuals providing rides in their own vehicles to people who want rides. Do you think that a private arrangement between two individuals to allow someone to stay in a room or apartment or whatever belonging to another in exchange for some cash means that the room/apartment or whatever needs to abide by the same heavy regulations as a hotel? The government has 2 pressures and incentives here: hotel/lodging lobbyists, not getting their tax revenue. If you really think they're doing this from a perspective of public safety, I think we'd just have to disagree.
Normally, they should be required to be in at least 1 "B" film. The closer the IMDB film score is to 1, the worse the actor, so more points are awarded the further they are from "B" film quality.
Just because you think a law is "silly" does not mean that it is. All you are doing is giving a newcomer a financial advantage over established businesses. So when the new business harms the old business and can not handle the additional taxes and regulations when they are imposed you have less supply not more.
Do you think that a private arrangement between two individuals to allow someone to stay in a room or apartment or whatever belonging to another in exchange for some cash means that the room/apartment or whatever needs to abide by the same heavy regulations as a hotel?
As soon as money changes hands it is no longer a "private arrangement". When you charge for a place to stay you are now a hotel unless it is on a month to month basis then you have a roommate. If you are providing the same service as a hotel you are operating a hotel. It is not a "public safety" issue.
For example, someone renting an apartment but never living there and only renting short term through Airbnb is a bad actor. First, they are running a one room hotel with lower regulatory costs than a hotel. Second they are probably doing it against the lease. Third, they have little incentive to ensure that their tenants are following noise restrictions. Fourth, they are removing a rental apartment from a probably already tight rental market.
I think you're describing the problems with big government regulation squeezing regular people. You're saying that if I make arrangements with someone to allow them to stay in a spare room and they give me $30 a night, I need to adhere to all regulations a full fledged hotel would have to. I say that, while what I'm doing may be illegal in the strictest sense, it shouldn't be - and adhering to the same regulations as a hotel in such a case is beyond ridiculous. I say that the scenario above SHOULD be a *private arrangement*, and the fact that you think it isn't is part of the problem.
It's similar to Uber's situation with individuals providing rides in their own vehicles to people who want rides. Do you think that a private arrangement between two individuals to allow someone to stay in a room or apartment or whatever belonging to another in exchange for some cash means that the room/apartment or whatever needs to abide by the same heavy regulations as a hotel? The government has 2 pressures and incentives here: hotel/lodging lobbyists, not getting their tax revenue. If you really think they're doing this from a perspective of public safety, I think we'd just have to disagree.
YES I do think they should abide by the same rules as in order for insurance to be valid and cover you they must also be following the rules. This is the reason I would never use Uber here in Australia as while an accident is unlikely I like knowing I am insured against such an event and in most Uber drivers sharing you are definitely NOT covered. Similiarly if I am paying for accommodation I want to know that they are meeting minimum health and safety requirements and also have appropriate insurance.
There are some who rent out a room in their home occasionally. With proper regulation that should be allowed. There are others who rent apartments specifically to rent out as a short term rental. These are the ones that need to comply with the complete hotel rules. Registered bed and breakfasts have to comply with ruled why shouldn't Airbnb poster have to comply with those regulations as well?
You're saying that if I make arrangements with someone to allow them to stay in a spare room and they give me $30 a night, I need to adhere to all regulations a full fledged hotel would have to.
Are you paying taxes on the income? Do you have adequate parking for that tenant?
Will you say a different story when someone is burned to death because there was no fire alarm system which a hotel is required to have but a private residence is not?
There are two different scenarios we are talking about; spare room rental and short term apartment sublet. The former should be allowed with minimal regulation. The latter needs to be watched very closely.
There are two different scenarios we are talking about; spare room rental and short term apartment sublet. The former should be allowed with minimal regulation. The latter needs to be watched very closely.
I agree with this completely.
Will you say a different story when someone is burned to death because there was no fire alarm system which a hotel is required to have but a private residence is not?
That's just a ridiculous argument. Apartment buildings are required to maintain fire alarm systems, have fire escapes, fire extinguishers, etc.
Unless you are saying the requirements for a hotel are safer, in which case why not regulate so that everyone can live in a fire safe dwelling?
This summary is inaccurate - it is a "public safety" issue. In the Nigel Warren case where he rented out his room on Airbnb in NYC, the judge levied a fine of fine of $2,400 after ruling that they were operating an unlicensed hotel.
The law on which the decision was based, Bill S6873B-2009 states:-
I.e. The reasoning given for the law was to protect public safety, specifically to ensure compliance with fire and safety codes.
Keanu Reeves is a bad actor. Did he get busted?
Go fuck yourself with your spam links.
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During the last year of negotiations with the NY AG (Eric Schneiderman), AirBnB offered to remit taxes on the hosts' behalf, as they have done in other markets (such as San Francisco). The AG rejected this proposal. Why? Because it's not about taxes, it's about killing any possible competition the large hotels in NYC face. In fact, Schneiderman has surrounded himself with people who have heavy ties to the hotel industry, and has accepted tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from hotel lobbies.
It's inconvenient, but it's true. The NY State government's actions are, yet again, predatory and anticompetitive.
There are lots of bad actors in Manhattan alone. I just spotted Tom Cruise and Bill Murray.
What's unethical about renting out rooms to SMers and to normal people? As long as they clean up properly, I don't see anything wrong with it. Anyway, you don't have control over what your guests use the room for, nor should it matter.
Unless you are saying the requirements for a hotel are safer, in which case why not regulate so that everyone can live in a fire safe dwelling?
The requirements for a hotel should be stricter. If you are renting a room for the night, you should not have to check the batteries in the fire alarm. If you have a three year lease on an apartment, it is reasonable for that to be your responsibility, rather than the landlords.
I'm guessing my last comment lost a point due to some sockpuppet mod account of yours. So let me repeat it: "Go fuck yourself with your spam links." I can do this all you like. Get fucked.
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The referenced domain lists usman_khalid143@yahoo.com in its contact information. I wonder how long that email account will stay live.
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It was the potentially unlicensed activity in an unsafe basement I'd imagine.
Big different hosting in a club that's met fire safety, etc standards and a basement that was never certified to begin with.
If it *WAS* on the other hand, then no harm no foul. But I assume that's what GP was discussing. Repurposing areas in a manner that they were never certified for.
The other bit was probably just a reference to the bad publicity if you had some normal people wander downstairs, say to use the laudry room and either walking in on something they'd find offensive and publicize, or accidentally put in a call to the cops thinking something violent was going on.
A lot of these Bad Actors are people renting out 10, 20 and more rooms at a time. They are basically removing residential space from the city and pushing up rental prices
To encourage innovation, the thing to do is at least temporarily ignore the silly local laws such as this and give the innovative company a chance to get settled.
I agree. When does my free ignore the law end for, say, breaking and entering and grand theft?
Just wondering.
Also, your idea is terrible and you should feel terrible. If the laws cause undue hardship, they need to fucking go. Not be danced around at the whim of e-hipsters. But that'd just fly in the face of masturbating over excessive government, I guess.
I think you may have just hit on the next advertising masterpiece:
I expect a roach free room and a mechanically sound taxi.
For everyone else, there's Lyft and AirBNB.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
OK, but in both cases you need a fire alarm, right? And in neither case is someone legally allowed to disable the alarm, right?
I still don't see any difference.
Vast generalization here (I'm not a legal scholar)- but it looks like laws have been put in place to 1) encourage something viewed as good by the legislature or 2) discourage something viewed as bad by the legislature. What is viewed as "good" or "bad" is up to the legislator, the folks that the elected the legislator, the folks that the legislator represents, and most important to our current system of campaign finance, the folks that pay for the legislator's campaign. Airbnb is ostensibly a mechanism to allow people to profit from use underutilized space. Unfortunately some of the underutilized space is contained in clauses in lease agreements that the Airbnb hosts chose to ignore.
The hotel laws were put in place because of abuses. Rent control was put in place because of abuses and to encourage affordable housing. The "bad actors" are those that are abusing the system at the potential risk to their customers- and they are customers, not guests. Because of the immense amount of money moving around, there will be abuses and bargains. Leave it up to a company to determine the bad actors, and they will invariably call out those that pose the greatest risk- and since it is a profit driven company, risk is about money, with no consideration given to public welfare (ostensibly the government's arena).
It has EVERYTHING to do with killing innovation. Think about it for a second, who benefits?
The (probably few) customers who don't get scammed by shady "hosts". The neighbors who don't have to put up with living next to a de-facto hotel which the property is almost certainly not zoned for. The taxing authorities and by extension the local citizens who are probably not receiving the benefits of tax revenue they would otherwise receive. The normal hotels and their employees who lose revenue they likely otherwise would have received.
Just because something is new doesn't mean it is necessarily good. I don't have a problem with Air Bnb and I actually do wish them the best of luck but just because they think their product is "innovative" doesn't automatically mean it is a good idea. I can see potential problems with the service that are serious and need to be addressed in a more adult way than screaming "KILLING INNOVATION" to anyone who will listen.
Do you think that a private arrangement between two individuals to allow someone to stay in a room or apartment or whatever belonging to another in exchange for some cash means that the room/apartment or whatever needs to abide by the same heavy regulations as a hotel?
In some cases the answer will be yes. If I found my out my neighbor had turned his house into a de-facto hotel, I would likely be pretty upset and rightly so. That potentially affects me and my property so you better believe I'm going to want a say in the matter. Furthermore there are various important liability, safety and taxation concerns that need to be addressed before any sane person should give a blanket go-ahead.
Are you paying taxes on the income? Do you have adequate parking for that tenant? These are the kinds of concerns that really get to me. First, you basically have to report all income over a certain amount. I know there was a story a few years back where a bunch of people got busted for running businesses off of eBay and not paying their taxes. It doesn't matter how they run their business. That doesn't mean that people shouldn't be allowed to use eBay at all because their are some bad actors. There are businesses that are traditional brick and mortar businesses who don't pay their taxes either
Also, who cares if they have parking for the tenant. Maybe the tenant doesn't even have a car. I saw something like this on a real estate reality show a year or so back. Somebody wanted to rent out their basement to a tenant and had to get their driveway widened to allow there to be adequate room for parking or it wouldn't meet code for having a tenant. If they want to limit their selection of tenants by not having parking then that's their business. But hotels shouldn't be required to have parking for tenants, especially in a place like New York city, where nobody drives anyway.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
http://blog.uber.com/uberXridesharinginsurance
Oh, really?
It stopped being a private arrangement when it started being facilitated by a 3rd party.
Better than uber, in this situation these people can easily squat and the home owner would have to go through the full eviction process ... Which means in some locations that you can't have them removed for at least 90 days! And no, changing the locks while they are out isn't legal either.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
OK, but in both cases you need a fire alarm, right? And in neither case is someone legally allowed to disable the alarm, right?
I still don't see any difference.
From the post you're replying to:
The requirements for a hotel should be stricter. If you are renting a room for the night, you should not have to check the batteries in the fire alarm. If you have a three year lease on an apartment, it is reasonable for that to be your responsibility, rather than the landlords.
Add to that that hotels have mandatory annual inspections, with a fire inspector who walks through and checks all of the alarms and extinguishers. You don't do that in your apartment, I'm sure, and yet it's something a hotel tenant relies on.
People forget that there is another side here - the NYC resident. Consider that there's likely several people within 20 feet of me at any given time - this is the reality of big city living.
What AirBnB means to me is a diminished quality of life.
It means "guests" rolling in at 2am, feeling the need to open and close every door and cupboard (and waking up my household). Ringing my bell accidentally at all hours. Using AirBnB to find one-night party space. Smoking everywhere.
This is all from one apartment directly above me. If I complain to NYC, it means that they're sued to death and evicted (which I'm sorely tempted to do, but the punishment is very harsh). If I don't, I have to live in a noisier, less enjoyable circumstance.
And yes, I've taken the time to ask the folks upstairs to be more considerate. Their response? "It's our right", even though it's against the law.
AirBnB sucks.
Yeah see that's something that wasn't said in the original post and you're taking bits and pieces of reality and making specious arguments based on them.
It's reasonable to say that, whereas with a rented apartment the tenant has certain things they need to do, a person renting a hotel room should have less of these given the transient nature of his renting.
So, while I buy my own toilet paper in my flat, for instance, I would be quite annoyed if I showed up at a hotel and they told me you have to buy your own toilet paper (or lightbulbs, or any number of things).
However that's all sort of implied in the rental contract, and whether you're renting for long term or short term.
But, no where is it said hotels have to have smoke detectors / alarms / etc but apartments not. In the same way that it's not required for hotels to have lights, and apartments not.
Really this whole argument is specious. It's very simple:
a. The bigger your building, the more fire equipment needed
b. For very big apartment buildings, you have the same sorts of precautions as in a hotel. When I lived in a tower in Boston, we did actually have a fire marshall come through to test our alarms.
c. Hotels tend to be the size of very big apartments (see point a). This in no way means hotels must have fire equipment whereas apartments not. If you end up at a small bed and breakfast, you might find it is not equipped with the same fire equipment as a tower.
d. If you are renting out your apartment short term like a hotel, you must maintain it. If you rent it out long term, like a flat, the tenant maintains it. But this is a separate issue, and in no instance is someone allowed an exception to the fire code.
If you are renting out your apartment short term like a hotel, you must maintain it. If you rent it out long term, like a flat, the tenant maintains it. But this is a separate issue, and in no instance is someone allowed an exception to the fire code.
If the short term rental is not licensed and regulated then what is there to guarantee that this maintenance is done? Also, many apartments are not required to have a sprinklers while almost all hotels are required to have them.
One major difference is that long term tenants know the building and can get out faster. Second long term tenants have the choice of installing alarms and sprinklers. Do you think the lack of sprinklers would be advertised on the Airbnb listing?
I'm pretty sure this is based on building size not the fact that you're a hotel.
I lived in a tower in boston, and they had an integrated smoke detection system (don't burn something at 03:00 am you'll wake the neighbors), a fire marshal who checked everything was working on a regular basis, sprinklers, fire extinguishers in the hallway, etc.
A few days ago I was in London, and stayed in a B&B. It was an old building, and there might have been smoke detectors, but there wasn't a fire escape I could see, and I would have burned alive if there was a fire.
It doesn't matter how they run their business..
I have a small craft business and I am required to have a local license to sell in some craft shows. I think that room renters need to as well.
If they want to limit their selection of tenants by not having parking then that's their business.
Who makes sure that they "limit their selection of tenants" if they are not licensed or regulated.
But hotels shouldn't be required to have parking for tenants, especially in a place like New York city, where nobody drives anyway.
Many tourists from the North East try to. They drive in and park their vehicles.
I've used Airbnb and never had a shady experience.
So clearly we can extrapolate from your experience that no one ever has had or will have a problem... [/sarcasm]
Look, most people probably will never have a problem because most people are decent law abiding sorts. Those aren't who we are worried about. It's the few really bad ones that hurt, steal from or defraud or otherwise harm someone. If your experiences have been great, that is wonderful but that doesn't mean it isn't worth worrying about both for the visitor and the host. If you want to take the risks involved in using a service like AirBnB I have no problem with that but that doesn't mean there aren't some very important public health and safety considerations to address.
Yes really. It has been stated by both the insurance industry and government in Australia that Uber drivers are NOT insured here unless they have a commercial license and corresponding commercial insurance as it is illegal to offer for hire services without a public transport license and insurance is invalid when you are operating outside the law
They are limiting their own selection of tenants by not providing a service that some of them may want. There's plenty of brick and mortar stores that don't have any parking. Why should hotels be required to have parking? If people want a hotel with parking they'll verify that it has parking before they book a room there.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
I'm not sure if anyone has addressed this issue about Airbnb, but it seems that one potential group that is getting hurt are the landloards that own the apartment building individuals are renting out on Airbnb. The reason, in my opinion, is that in large cities like New York and San Francisco you have rent control. So a landloard can't increase your rent by more then around 1%/year, but then the tenant can turn around and rent out his room or apartment for more than he pays in rent and actually making money at the landlords expense. Does anyone have any thoughts on this?
What about a Bed and Breakfast? isn't that in effect what this is? If I wish to rent a room from somebody for one night, that's between me and them so YES, it IS private.
The state are just using their racket to try and get some money out of it, when the state really are not entitled.
The real problem is Airbnb's respect of privacy. I will never use their service for anything.
I'm pretty sure this is based on building size not the fact that you're a hotel.
Building age also makes a big difference. It may be impossible to bring older buildings up to code without destroying them.
Different jurisdictions also have different rules. An historic building in London may have different rules than a modern building in New York.
There's plenty of brick and mortar stores that don't have any parking.
They are in commercial areas and adjacent residential areas usually have "residents only" parking or short term parking limits. Most patrons of "brick and mortar stores" do not park overnight. The problem is that commercial parking is very different than residential parking.
If people want a hotel with parking they'll verify that it has parking before they book a room there.
When the poster states there is parking on the street and causes parking issues in a residential area there is an issue.
As soon as money changes hands it is no longer a "private arrangement".
Congratulations; you've just given the religious right all the authority they need to regulate abortion out of existence.
Secession is the right of all sentient beings.
That is a Red Herring. Considering the State knows about most abortions already how does this change things?
You're saying that if I make arrangements with someone to allow them to stay in a spare room and they give me $30 a night, I need to adhere to all regulations a full fledged hotel would have to.
In New York City, according to my state assemblyman, you're not violating the law if you make arrangements for someone to stay in a spare room for $30 a night. (Although you may be violating your lease.)
You're violating the law if you make arrangements for someone to stay in your apartment by themselves for $30 a night, and leave. You have to be there.
If they don't want you parking on a residential street overnight, then they should have a no parking sign, or limit the number of consecutive hours you can park there and enforce the limit through fines. There are streets in my neighbourhood that have cars parked on them all the time because people have 2 cars but don't have room to park them on their own property. Their garage is full of stuff and they only have space for one car in the driveway. Even without people using their houses as hotels, there's still lots of people parking on the street. If the city doesn't like it, or the residents don't like it, they should get proper rules in place limit parking, not try to limit what people can do on their own property that may or may not result in cars parking exactly where they are legally allowed to park on the street.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
So lets add to an already overcrowded situation by adding an unlicensed small hotel without parking to a residential area.
"The normal hotels and their employees who lose revenue they likely otherwise would have received."
If they started by dropping their prices from an average of $120 per night, they would have me as a customer. Until then, I will continue using that $35/night room from Airbnb, thank you very much.
An AirBnB renter has way less invested than a hotel does, and in fact might care nothing for the guest experience because there is little recourse for the guest if they don't like what they get. ...living in their housing" Incorrect assumption in many AirBnB cases.
"people who are
There have been multiple cases of AirBnB renters in NYC selling time in their apartments - and collecting deposits upfront - and when the guests arrive there is someone else in the place or the place does not exist and the guests have to scramble to salvage their vacation.
For guests from other countries this is especially difficult for them to confirm there is a real place to come to, and when they get home they have almost no way to get their money back if there was a fraud.
http://blog.uber.com/uberXridesharinginsurance
Oh, really?
Firstly that is for the US not Australia. Secondly Australian law requires significantly higher levels of insurance for commercial transport providers, that policy doesn't come close to what is required here. Thirdly, regardless of the policy you can't operate a for hire service without a commercial license for public transport, as such most uber drivers are basically unlicensed which immediately invalids any insurance here in aus as insurance doesn't cover you when you are blatantly operating outside the law.
There is something funny, yet not truly humorous, about those hard core proponents of the Rambo version of the "free market".
They act like they are o-so-tough, can take it all and dish it back out at the same time.
They decry government, claim they never get sick, never need help and are always ready to fight off any man's army with their trusty six shooter.
They belittle those who are weak, need help to get back on their feet or come from an inherently disadvantaged background.
Yet those are the same - scared sh1tless - people who brought us the Department of Homeland Security, Warrantless Wiretaps and global Seizure of Private Data.
Those same "let the free market decide" people got no problem with government snooping in on people's bedroom behavior, deciding who can marry whom and in which position said marriage may be consummated.
The very same hard core Social=Socialism=Evil, let-the-dice-fall-where-they-may free market Rambos had no problem bailing out Wall Street to the tune of almost a Trillion Dollars!
You complain about little people being allowed to live in rent controlled apartments, and dare not to loose a single word about Goldman Sachs paying out multi-million dollar "performance bonuses" to their managers, the very year they got bailed out by Joe Schmoe's tax dollars?
Whoever claims so proudly that he doesn't need the protections of law & government, can live of the land and fight for himself 24x7, let him come with me.
I will show him places where there is no law, and no mercy for the weak.
Where the strong take all and the meager perish.
You know these places from 3 minute newsbits on CNN, some of us have family there and know what it means to live & die in a country where the free market reigns supreme.
The game of "let the pieces fall where they may", is the devil's own - and all else who claim mastery in it, too, are just fooling themselves.