Guest profile photos: Airbnb response to community feedback

Airbnb
Official Account

Guest profile photos: Airbnb response to community feedback

Hi everyone,

 

Thanks for all of your feedback on the recent changes we announced to the guest profile photo process. Our team has read each and every one of your comments. We understand many of you are feeling frustrated right now, so we want to respond with some more details and clarification.

 

First, we want to acknowledge that this is a complicated and emotional topic: It touches on elements such as discrimination, choice, safety, and equality between Airbnb hosts and guests. As always, we’ve been really impressed by the quality of the conversations, and the supportiveness of the community in this thread. We’ve had significant discussion and debate about it internally at Airbnb, too. It’s clear that we need to keep listening and engaging with you (our hosts and partners) on this topic, and we commit to continuing to do so.

 

At the same time, it’s important that we also continue to take guest concerns into account. Most guests do provide a profile photo, but others told us that they didn’t want to share a picture of themselves when booking on Airbnb because they’re concerned their photos could be misused in a way that violates Airbnb’s nondiscrimination policy. As you know, Airbnb’s mission is to create a world where people can belong anywhere, and we want to make sure guests can feel comfortable when they travel on Airbnb.

 

We also know from many conversations with hosts (and from reading through your comments here) that you really value profile photos, for several important reasons (knowing what guests look like before they arrive, feeling safer, etc.). We always want to balance the needs of both hosts and guests and, at the same time, make sure we’re working towards Airbnb’s mission. It can be exceptionally hard to get that balance right, but we tried to do this with these recent changes.

 

As we highlighted in our previous post, the new policy means that Airbnb will not require guests to provide a profile photo and that, for those guests who choose to provide a profile photo, those photos will not be shown to hosts until after the booking is accepted. At the same time, we introduced a new host control that allows you to opt in to require that your guests provide a profile photo prior to submitting a booking request. This photo will be shown to hosts as soon as you accept the booking request, so you’ll be able to ensure you know what your guests look like before they arrive. In addition, you can always require your guests to provide a government ID to Airbnb, as well (more on that here).

 

Here are a few more tips to help you build trust with guests before a trip:

  • You can message with them to get more information about the purpose of their trip;
  • You can use your House Rules to set expectations with potential guests, too. (Guests have to review and agree to your House Rules before they can request to book your space.)
  • You can review past guest reviews, from other hosts, to make a more informed decision about accepting booking requests.

 

Now, there are a few key themes we read in your comments about these changes, and we want to take a few minutes to address each of them:

 

Safety: Many of you mentioned that you’re not comfortable hosting someone who doesn't want to show their face, and some of you pointed out that you’re in challenging situations (remote locations and solo female hosts, for instance). This is an incredibly important topic. We’ve read through your responses, and we are committed to looking for ways to build trust between guests and hosts in all situations.

 

We’d like to extend an invitation to the engaged host community following this thread. Our home safety team is brainstorming ideas for how we could improve your experience and ensure you feel more safe hosting. While we have lots of ideas, we know the best solutions will come from listening to you, so we’d like to connect directly. Please let us know in the comments, below.

 

Timing: Many of you asked when you would see the changes to the guest profile photo process occur. We’re rolling them out gradually, as we often do with new products or processes. Currently, these changes have been introduced to 75% of hosts globally, and in the coming weeks will be available to 100% of hosts.  

 

Profile photos: A number of you raised concerns about profile photos that show a picture of a sunset or the guest’s dog instead of the guest themselves.  We have updated our policies to address these concerns. If you choose to turn on the new control and require that your guests have a profile photo, you can call Airbnb’s Community Support if you accept a reservation from a guest that does not have a profile photo of themselves.  Our Community Support team will work with you to address the situation. If you feel uncomfortable hosting someone without a photo of themselves, you can request to cancel the reservation penalty-free. (We recommend messaging the guest directly before cancelling.)

 

Discrimination: We do not condone discrimination by any member of the Airbnb community. These changes are part of our commitment to combating discrimination. Many of you responded that you believe these changes were unnecessary because you share our commitment to diversity and inclusion. We appreciate that feedback and can’t overstate the importance of having a host community that is engaged on this topic. Nonetheless, guests have consistently told us that they have concerns about hosts making decisions based on profile photos in violation of our Non-discrimination policy. We believe the changes to how we display photos addresses these concerns while balancing hosts’ interest in seeing potential guests before they arrive. Making these changes was an incredibly complex decision, for all the reasons you raised, but after significant debate (and working with many experts on this topic), we decided they were crucial changes to make.

 

Thank you for continuing to give us feedback and support as we strive to continue improving Airbnb for both hosts and guests. We hope you understand that we needed to make these changes to ensure a world of belonging and inclusivity. Please continue to tell us how we can improve, and we’ll continue to listen and adjust as we work to ensure you can feel comfortable and confident hosting.

 

Thank you,

The Airbnb Team

199 Replies 199

@Shaffproperties

 

I'm not sure about the law in Florida, but I have been advised to close my listing on this platform due to the myraid liability concerns created by the hosting policies imposed on this platform.

Phil-And-Aquilla0
Level 10
London, United Kingdom

I love the patronizing and one sided tone of  Airbnb's response in the face of overwhelming opposition from hosts to the introduction of  this new policy of "no photo until after booking" for guests.

 

Some of the choice quotes:

. "We understand many of you are feeling frustrated right now".

 

A big understatement! We have been hosts for six and a half years but like many other hosts are now considering other options.

 

" It’s clear that we need to keep listening and engaging with you".

 

But it is also clear that inspite of all the reaction against this innovation Airbnb are not going to budge!

 

" We want to make sure guests can feel comfortable when they travel on Airbnb".

 

What about making hosts feel comfortable with guests they receive? We are a family home with two daughters and need to carefully vet the people we take in!

 

"We are committed to looking for ways to build trust between guests and hosts in all situations".

 

Really? So that's why you take away the guest's photo! Of course the host's photo has not been removed! Guests can discriminate as much as they want!

 

"Our home safety team is brainstorming ideas for how we could improve your experience and ensure you feel more safe hosting".  

 

Had a good laugh about that one. Just who is Airbnb trying to kid?

 

Airbnb wake up! Overwhelmingly hosts oppose this change and in the course of time many will simply go elsewhere!

 

 
33 Replies

@Phil And Aquilla 

@Airbnb I am unable to like a post from Phil And Aquilla.....what's with that one???

perhaps you can fix that little glitch. Thanks

@Clara116  I couldn't either- then I noticed that there were actually 2 "like" boxes under their post. Skip below the first box and look under where it says 33 Replies and try the box below that. definitely a weird glitch.

Hi @Clara0, Thanks for your reponse and sorry for the confusion! When copying and pasting from Airbnb's post I accidentally pasted the last part of their post (showing the link to "Join the conversation" and "Replies") as well. If you go to the thumbs up opposite the red Reply tab that should work.

Tamara2
Level 4
London, United Kingdom

I have just provided a feedback to Airbnb about it. I think that Airbnb's snowflake management had virtually and officially lost a plot! Since Airbnb cites as the reason behind this decision as discrimination, let's talk discrimination! Firstly if someone wants to discriminate, they will find the way to do so, whether you remove the pic or not. What you have achieved by removing picture before booking is you have put us women especially, at risk. You wouldn't let your daughter to go on a date with a faceless stranger, and you would always advise to meet in a busy place full of people. But you are asking us hosts, especially female hosts, as more vulnerable ones, to not only 'get a blind date' with a faceless guest, but invite them  in to our homes. And on that note, me and thousands of other female hosts on our Airbnb Hosts Facebook group were pretty unanimous about this feature: IT IS A DISCRIMINATION AGAINST US WOMEN!!!  I have never discriminated based on race, age, looks, etc. in 5 years. I have hosted united colours of Benetton in my home, and I have repeat guests from all over the world, black, yellow, pink, whatever colour. I had christians, buddhists, hindus, jewish, muslims, jehovah's witnesses, agnostics, straight, gay, lesbian, slim, fat, tall, short, pretty, not so pretty, young and old. I DON'T CARE IF THE PERSON IS PRETTY or NOT! All I need for comfort is to see whether the person looks friendly and trustworthy. Picture speaks a 1000s words. The emotion I draw from the picture gives me a sense of security. I am connecting to the person. Without it, I feel exposed, at risk. IT IS YOUR DUTY TO EQUIP HOSTS WITH EVERY IMAGINABLE DECISION MAKING TOOL, NOT LIMIT THEM.  30% of my annual bookings now come from your competitors = 30% less bookings on Airbnb. Majority of hosts are women, if one is to believe online statistics. So please start respecting the very branch you sit on and start giving more respect to us hosts because WITHOUT US HOSTS THERE WON'T BE AIRBNB!!! 

I agree @Tamara55

 

This is massive discrimination and breaches in many area by airbnb against women hosts and independent hosts overall.

Well said Tamara! Airbnb management must be socialist snowflakes where by deleting the profile photo they can save the world from discrimination! Except they are discriminating against the host, particularly female hosts.

@Airbnb2,

please address the real issue here. SCREENING GUESTS. hosts are left to fend for themselves. And without proper tools - you, Airbnb, encourage prejudice. WHY?

Secure Accommodation CANNOT be trusted with Airbnb as it cares mostly about iTD bottom line, and making it easy for more users to join.

Unfortunately, there are NO regulation by the state or federal law (so far), and I suspect it would take a major crime or a terorist attack to draw congress attention to Airbnb practices. 

Therefore, i call all hosts: call your congressman TODAY, and ask for secure accommodation. Like any hotel, where a guest is required by federal and state law to provide a government issued ID, with a head shot, not a pet, not a sunsets. A clear photo ID !!!

 

@Oad0

 

It would be really great if you'd complete your profile ...

 

 

I am beginning to think that a short business orientation class should be made mandatory for hosts. How is your profile any better? You may complete or not complete a profile - it can still be bogus. One can post anything, That is the nature of online profiles. They are not vetted by anyone. However, for some industries, where online can become a physical encounter - regulations are needed. Like security and background checks for UBER drivers. hosting should follow the same path to become safe. Regulation is key

Jeanette107
Level 2
Dunedin, New Zealand

Stop **bleep** footing around, Airbnb!

 

This platform is based on trust. Like many others we leave our guests in our home when we go to work. Come on Airbnb - make it mandatory to provide a photo and profile when joining. It’s absolutely not unreasonable and only fair to the people you rely on - the hosts, because without them there would be no Airbnb. 

@Jeanette0

you write and I quote: “without the hosts there would be no Airbnb”

There are more than 4 million listings on Airbnb (see link below)

on this thread, or any other community thread there are hundreds, maybe thousands... not even close to 0.1%

...you may be right, but are you effective?

to be effective - call your congressman or woman today. ask to make hosting safe. WIt’s the 400 folks or so on this thread, it might put a dent. Or not... 

here is a link to Airbnb stats:

https://ipropertymanagement.com/airbnb-statistics/

Anna33
Level 3
London, United Kingdom

I am a single female anf have been hosting for 4 years in my own home. I always require guests to provide a photo, verified ID and some information about themselves. Not being able to see the profile photo BEFORE accepting a booking is a deal breaker for me. If this is not changed I will leave Airbnb.

The discrimination thing works both ways, hosts could equally claim their photos should not be displayed before a booking is confirmed. However, we all know that providing a photo builds trust (on both sides), which is a major part of what Airbnb WAS built on...

Cor3
Level 10
Langerak, South Holland, Netherlands

Hi @Airbnb,

 

I do agree with the comments made here. And it seems clear, that whatever we say here or protest against. This policy is not going to be reversed. It’s another classic example of a decision taken at Airbnb HQ. We can vent here for a while. And at some stage, it will all pass by. And it will be a done deal.

We’ve all witnessed it before. Does the discussion on the 48-hour grace period ring a bell with anyone?

 

Well @Lizzie, you wanted suggestions, I’ll give you a few:

  • Why not give the decision on possibly hiding the guest profile picture – prior to booking – in the hands of the guests themselves. You can even set the default to: Hide (But please attach a remark: Leaving this setting to Hide, will increase their chance of being rejected by some hosts). Basically the same idea, as the extra option. Which was introduced, as a result of the 48-hour grace period discussion.
  • You have the availability of facial recognition software. So when guests do not provide a selfie-style frontal profile picture, they must complete their profile with at least 20 or 50 words. Of course they can always upload a picture of somebody else. But it will at least help.

 

Just some food for thought: As you say, you want to abolish discrimination on the platform (fine with me of course). And this being the main reason, for this policy change. I can assure you: More than ever, empty profiles, will become an even bigger red flag, than they already were. Most likely resulting in more declines on inquiries, rather than in decreasing these. So, less $$$ for Airbnb.

When I look at the past history of my guests, the best guests had completely filled out profiles, including proper profile pictures and their actual name + correct place of residence (we are required to collect ID Info, you see)!

Simple reason: They have nothing to hide!

And we can all do very well without the guests, that have lesser intentions.

Guests who do not want to reveal their identity, and still expect me to handover the keys to a lifetime saving. Is free to book somewhere else 😄

 

Just my 2-cents.