Travelers looking to rent an apartment for a few days in New York City will find slimmer pickings now that city officials have started enforcing new rules cracking down on short-term rentals on sites like Airbnb.

    • Clent@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I’m sure it triggers the victim response in a lot of people who will never visit the city; aka morons.

    • eric@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      Agreed. I wish I just was looking to rent a furnished apartment right about now because it’s a renters market, but I’m plenty good where I’m at.

  • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Does anybody actually like it when airBnB moves into their neighborhood? I had one try and move in next door. fortunately my city had a defacto ban in place (the permit basically means you have to be a hotel-level of operation to successfully get the permit.).

    They were only in operation for two or three groups staying and it was a nightmare. Trash being thrown into my yard. Shitty party music until 3 am. idiots trying to drive home from a keggar. drunken fratboys trying to figure out how to use my brick smoker to grill their fucking hotdogs… because the fence wasn’t an obvious enough indication that maybe it was someone else’s property. idiots blocking my drive way. Drunken idiots trying to drive out to get…whatever…

    Like, I could not imagine living with that constant barage of bullshit. the funny part was the host was pissed that we dared call the cops on their ‘guests’. (who then proceeded to piss off the cops with bullshit pseudo-lawyering.)

    • Chetzemoka@kbin.social
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      2 years ago

      AirBNB was great back when it was just a viable means for finding a room in someone’s house to crash for a few days. Then the profiteers found it and AirBNB sacrificed their entire reputation for short-sighted greed. Add with everything in the past 20 years

      • eric@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        I used to be a host in nyc with two rooms in my place, and it was just that, profiteering ruining it for everyone. But before the LLCs, there were the hosts that just scaled l into becoming profiteerers. A lot of them started as regular hosts and simply found it much more lucrative to scale it to many units or entire buildings.

        It was a fun experiment for a while, but I hated what it became as soon as Airbnb started marketing itself more aggressively. Once they shared listings with hotel aggregators, it was over, completely changing the type of clientele and turning it into a sort of Russian roulette, where one in six guests would do something that got me closer to quitting it altogether, which I did eventually.

        Edit for clarity: I’m in favor of the current regulation.

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    If only there were some well-established type of business, one with lots of rooms available for short periods of time that don’t share those hallways of rooms with full-time residents. Something you would pay a fee for and they would let you stay in one of those rooms. I wonder what we would call it? Maybe an AirbnTel?

  • Shotgun_Alice@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    I’ve been saying this but I’m surprised no one at Airbnb thought of this, but just start doing long-term rentals. Become a rental management company. Easier said than done, but they have the cash on hand to make it happen.

    • Copernican@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I think they realize where the demand is and what their client base is, and it’s a lot of folks looking for short term stays.