Airbnb continues to have a serious hidden camera problem

Cal Jeffrey

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In brief: A CNN investigation found that despite being aware of the hidden camera problem, Airbnb has consistently failed to protect its guests. Thousands of images, including private moments such as guests changing clothes or being intimate, have been recovered from hidden surveillance devices. Victims express ongoing fear that these images could be leaked online.

A recent lawsuit has exposed a disturbing trend in the short-term rental industry: hosts secretly recording guests at rental properties. The case involves a woman who discovered she was filmed undressing, with her images stored on the computer of an alleged sex offender who had been spying on renters for years, CNN reported. Airbnb, a major player in the short-term rental industry, has faced similar situations before and typically seeks to settle them quickly and confidentially. However, this case unfolded differently, revealing deeper issues within the company.

During a court-ordered deposition, an Airbnb agent disclosed that the company had generated tens of thousands of customer support tickets for surveillance devices over the past decade. Despite this, Airbnb does not routinely notify law enforcement when a guest reports a hidden camera, even when a child is involved. Instead, the company typically contacts the hosts, potentially allowing time for them to destroy evidence. Privacy advocates have criticized this approach for interfering with criminal investigations.

In March, the rental broker tried stemming public outcry by banning indoor security cameras. It gave hosts until April 30, 2024, to remove all indoor security cameras regardless of placement or purpose. However, the new regulations are toothless and hard to enforce. Hosts have never been allowed to place cameras in private areas, which is the problem. So, banning them throughout the rest of the house does not address the situation.

In response to CNN's inquiries, Airbnb claimed hidden camera complaints are rare and that the company takes swift action when they occur, including removing violating hosts and listings. However, the company's policies come with significant disclaimers, such as not guaranteeing the identification of all criminal convictions or sex offender registrations. Additionally, Airbnb's background checks are not foolproof, and criminal convictions are not automatic disqualifiers.

Airbnb's history traces back to 2007 when co-founder Brian Chesky and his roommate started renting air mattresses in their San Francisco apartment. The company has since grown into a multi-billion-dollar entity, valued higher than big-name hotel chains Hyatt and Marriott combined. Despite this, Airbnb does not have the same responsibilities as hotels, such as maintaining property security, leading to gaps in guest safety.

The short-term rental industry has faced numerous incidents of violent crime, prostitution, and even guest deaths, which have periodically thrust Airbnb and its competitors into the spotlight. Hidden cameras are a particularly insidious issue that Airbnb has known about for at least a decade but has struggled to address effectively.

A notable case involved David Wyzynajtys, who found a hidden camera in an Airbnb rental in Texas. Despite alerting Airbnb, he received minimal support from the company. Law enforcement later discovered that the host had been recording guests for over a year, capturing the intimate moments of more than 30 victims, including children! The host, A. Jay Allee, was eventually charged and pleaded guilty, but his case highlights Airbnb's delayed response and inadequate guest protection measures.

The legal landscape has not helped either, with Airbnb often fighting against regulations and liability in court, arguing it has little control over what happens at its listings. This stance has made it difficult for victims to seek justice and for authorities to regulate the industry effectively.

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I'm not defending Airbnb, however, regulating what is essentially a network of non-affiliated homeowners has got to be a nightmare. It's not like these are hotel rooms contained within a hotel over which Airbnb would have total control.

Perhaps what Airbnb needs to do is develop some sort of serious vetting process for people who want list their homes with Airbnb. It sounds like its the owners of these homes that are the real problem.
 
I'm not defending Airbnb, however, regulating what is essentially a network of non-affiliated homeowners has got to be a nightmare. It's not like these are hotel rooms contained within a hotel over which Airbnb would have total control.

Perhaps what Airbnb needs to do is develop some sort of serious vetting process for people who want list their homes with Airbnb. It sounds like its the owners of these homes that are the real problem.
Yeah, the real problem is a poor vetting process and the desire to keep the problem hidden with binding arbitration and NDAs.
 
Its only hotels for me and the fam. Too many AirBnB horror stories between cleaning fees/hidden cams/illegally rented spaces to trust already far too precious vacations to this kind of crapshoot.
Yeah, you really have to go with more of a resort-like setup. The place we stayed in Lahaina, Maui was well kept but it was a condo high-rise with a regular staff and not someone's managed or unmanaged house. It was also not affiliated with Airbnb whatsoever. I got to know the owners of our unit pretty well through email and it was a pleasure meeting them while we were there. Too bad the whole city got destroyed.
 
Its only hotels for me and the fam. Too many AirBnB horror stories between cleaning fees/hidden cams/illegally rented spaces to trust already far too precious vacations to this kind of crapshoot.
I know Marriot, in the US, has listings for home rentals. However, I have no idea whether they are any better at controlling the properties they list than Airbnb is. Maybe their homes are better or they vet the properties better than Airbnb.

Of course, Marriot has been in the business far longer than Airbnb and perhaps that experience helps them run their home rental solution better than Airbnb is capable of doing with Airbnb's comparative lack of experience.

I haven't used Marriot's home rental service, so I really don't know.
 
A need leads to a search for a solution. Why was Airbnb so much better than hotels? Because hotels have filthy pigs fees built in into their room price. A lot of people starting with Airbnb renting their property did not know this horror existed.
Now they begin to realize it is not as bright as it seemed. Stupid people, making everything worse for other people.
I am not justifying camera use. But I think some of those people who used them are would rather spy on their renters than allow another bunch that trashes the place.
 
AirBnb is the primary culprit of inflated rent prices world-wide, and they have always been criminally negligent. They are the living proof that crime pays, and pays really well. Their business model is an absolute scam, but nobody is willing to bring them down, because they are so big.
 
AirBnb is the primary culprit of inflated rent prices world-wide, and they have always been criminally negligent. They are the living proof that crime pays, and pays really well. Their business model is an absolute scam, but nobody is willing to bring them down, because they are so big.

I agree.
 
My four(?) experiences as an AirBNB renter were all positive, and brought me benefits I could not have gotten from a hotel offering.

I've rented many more hotel rooms (dozens), and sure enough, that's where the few problems I've had occurred. Not being able to honor my reservation, defective rooms, surprise/wrong charges, etc.

I don't know the problem rate at an AirBNB stay vs. a hotel stay is, but my gut instinct is the vast majority of stays at both are fine, which is why people use them (choosing on whichever better meets their needs.)
 
AirBnb is the primary culprit of inflated rent prices world-wide, and they have always been criminally negligent. They are the living proof that crime pays, and pays really well. Their business model is an absolute scam, but nobody is willing to bring them down, because they are so big.

I agree, and on top of that, ask anyone that lives in a street/neighborhood full of AirBnb houses (or independent seasonal/weekly/daily rental homes with the same business model). It's hell. The problem is not AirBnb itself but this entire business model - that should ideally be banned, or at least heavily regulated.

But if it was up to me, anywhere in the world, seasonal rentals of private homes should be made illegal. This practice already existed before AirBnb and even before the internet, but after AirBnb and social media, it has become endemic and an actual social problem for multiple reasons, the raise in home prices and legit rental prices being only the most obvious. Exception being for AirBnb's original business model, which was the idea of renting single rooms in homes inhabited by the owner. Want to make money hosting travelers/tourists? Build and open a hotel, motel, hostel, whatever.

At least in many places, especially in Europe, legit homeowners are starting to get fed up with this.
 
My four(?) experiences as an AirBNB renter were all positive, and brought me benefits I could not have gotten from a hotel offering.
Agreed. We rent the same 5-BR AirBNB every year. It's on a semi-private island (no hotels), with private parking, private hot tub, and private walkway to the beach. There's a full kitchen and laundry room, and home is stocked with everything you might possibly need -- down to AAA batteries and calamine lotion for sunburns. There's a building on the property full of every beach accessory imaginable, and, when we choose to go in colder weather, the homeowner has a real wood fire burning in the fireplace when we arrive. That's a rather difficult experience to find at any hotel or resort less than $20K a night.

AirBnb[ is] the living proof that crime pays, and pays really well. Their business model is an absolute scam, but nobody is willing to bring them down, because they are so big.
I hate to interrupt a good unhinged rant, but the word 'crime' isn't defined as "any practice I dislike" ... there must be an actual law broken. AirBnb earns a commission by connecting buyers and sellers of short-term rentals. They don't warrant the behavior of the seller or buyer. I imagine you're not terribly concerned by all the owners of million-dollar properties who've had their homes trashed by AirBnb tenants throwing wild 100+ people parties, are you?

if it was up to me, anywhere in the world, seasonal rentals of private homes should be made illegal.
Too bad for that whole "freedom" thing, eh Herr Himmler?

...it has become endemic and an actual social problem for multiple reasons, the raise in home prices and legit rental prices being only the most obvious
Wait a moment -- you're claiming that allowing millions of competitors to existing hotels is *raising* prices? Might I be allowed to introduce you to the law of supply and demand?

Certainly AirBnb investors purchasing homes in high-demand vacation areas raises property sale prices there. But that supply of short-term rentals -- by filling demand -- reduces pressure for actual hotel operators to swoop in and convert your neighbor's home into a 40-story resort. Would you prefer that?
 
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The solution is pretty simple: make Airbnb liable for negligence when these recording devices are found. They will be a lot more proactive about protecting their guests when their bottom line is threatened. Until then, they'll simply not care very much.
 
The solution is pretty simple: make Airbnb liable for negligence when these recording devices are found. They will be a lot more proactive about protecting their guests when their bottom line is threatened. Until then, they'll simply not care very much.

Airbnb works on a review system, not sure even good owners want to subsidize all that, even if it makes people trust the system more . Places can be really remote. Maybe in huge tourists areas, they could have an inspector.
First customer should use the local law, as illegal in most developed countries in areas people expecting privacy, especially if hidden.
Then we get the he said, she said , the planted it , that's not a camera. False accusations , or real one.

Really the police are best to gather evidence, and provide to interested parties.

Same happens for many times for insurance. need to provide a police report. Won't stop really malicious people, but will stop those out to cause travel , or to scam their money back. I found a stone in my food , a bed bug on my pillow type people . Those scammers can even target the nicest and most caring hosts . One star places don't care , it's cheap, you saw the ratings , F off
 
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