Being new to the community and soon to be a host, I'm curious to know the community's experience to support your views on Airbnb's announcement of the "New anti-party technology in the US and Canada" a few days ago, which has already been tested in Australia (although not the same).
The key points I found interesting of the article:
* Announcing the introduction of new anti-party tools in the US and Canada to help identify potentially high-risk reservations and prevent those users from taking advantage of our platform
* This system looks at factors like:
- History of positive reviews (or lack of positive reviews)
- Length of time the guest has been on Airbnb
- Length of the trip
- Distance to listing
- Weekend vs. weekday
- Among many others.
* The primary objective is attempting to reduce the ability of bad actors to throw unauthorized parties which negatively impact our Hosts, neighbors, and the communities we serve.
And "the cherry" of the article is this paragraph:
* While we are optimistic that this technology will have a positive impact for the safety of our community and our goal to reduce unauthorized parties — we want to be clear that no system is perfect. We work hard to determine bad actors from using our platform, but ultimately Airbnb is an online platform that facilitates real world connections. That’s why we continually seek to partner with experts and communities to complement their safety efforts, and we continue to invest in our Neighborhood Support Line to facilitate direct communication with neighbors regarding potential parties in progress or concerns with any nearby listings.
My question for everyone, especially those who already have time and experience as hosts (with a clear business vision): will it work? is it usefull?
Important: My intention is not to have a discussion full of complaints and emotional venting without proactively thinking of solutions, basically I want to know the resources we have both inside and outside the platform.
Article link: https://news.airbnb.com/airbnb-introduces-new-anti-party-technology-in-us-and-canada/