Bash crashers: Airbnb stopped 1,700 suspected parties in KC amid 2021 variant surges
January 28, 2022 | Startland News Staff
Airbnb’s ban on booking spots for house parties prevented hundreds of spreader events across Kansas City — especially impactful over holiday weekends known disruptive behavior, the company said Friday.
First introduced in summer 2020 to prioritize public health in the early days of the pandemic, Airbnb’s ban included new tech systems on the short-term rental platform aimed at trying to block and stop potential unauthorized parties while promoting safe and responsible travel, said Lisa Cohen, a company spokesperson who released the Kansas City data.
“Most prominently, in 2020 we announced a new product that restricts guests under the age of 25 without a history of positive reviews from booking entire home listings in their local area under certain circumstances,” Cohen said. “These guests are still allowed to book private room listings, where generally the Host lives on site.”
Airbnb’s “Under-25” anti-party system blocked or redirected about 1,700 people in Kansas City from making local entire home bookings, she detailed.
Click here to read more about San Francisco-based tech giant Airbnb’s party and events policy.
“Additionally, we recognize that certain time periods are more likely to encourage attempts to throw unauthorized parties,” Cohen said. “To help enforce our party policy during events like the Fourth of July, Halloween and New Year’s Eve, we introduced new systems and rules to strengthen our Hosts’ protection against unauthorized parties over those weekends.”
The anchor of this plan for these weekends was a ban on one-night bookings in entire home listings for guests without a history of positive reviews, she said.
In Kansas City, such anti-party defenses impacted more than 350 gatherings on the Fourth of July; more than 400 at Halloween; and more than 900 on New Year’s Eve, according to Airbnb.
“We believe it worked,” Cohen added. “Those weekends were generally quiet, and these initiatives were well-received by our Host community.”
Most Airbnb guests treat homes and neighborhoods with respect, and the anti-party tech isn’t meant to discourage their use of the popular platform, she emphasized.
“These initiatives are about trying to find the needles in the haystacks and stop potentially disruptive parties in service to our Hosts and neighbors,” Cohen said. “We also know that not every one of these people impacted by these various technologies intended to throw a party. Initiatives like these also may impact prospective guests who have no intention of throwing a party but who simply haven’t yet earned that history of positive reviews on our platform. In the meantime, this is a tradeoff we’re willing to make in the interests of trust and safety.”

2022 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
nbkc partners with Acorns as Kansas City bank deposits expanded fintech focus
A move by nbkc bank to provide Banking as a Service (BaaS) solutions to Acorns — a leading saving and investing app — is part of a broader strategy to invest in fintech companies without bank charters, said Melissa Eggleston. “We see a lot of potential as fintechs are taking off around the country. These…
What’s in a name? KC filmmakers’ documentary short finds ‘Black joy,’ Sundance premiere in reclaiming a family name
Names hold a person’s legacy and connect them to their past. Names are individualistic while also a representation of family units. Names are the first thing people own in the world, said Kansas City filmmakers Sharon Liese and Catherine Hoffman. The duo came together to tell the complicated, yet joyous, story of the Parker family.…
SnapIT’s founder builds tech company’s mission overseas while growing talent pool in Kansas
Employers across the globe need access to tech talent as demand for skilled IT workers surges, said Neelima Parasker, noting her Overland Park-based firm writes critical coding for the solution. “What we provide is unique in the sense that we are producing tech talent the fastest through microcredentials,” said Parasker, the founder and CEO of…

