Something’s Gone Wrong With Airbnb (www.theatlantic.com)
from narwhal@lemmy.ml to technology@lemmy.ml on 26 Sep 2023 11:30
https://lemmy.ml/post/5538017

#technology

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sharedburdens@hexbear.net on 26 Sep 2023 11:36 next collapse

no paywall: archive.ph/quFrZ

[deleted] on 26 Sep 2023 13:05 collapse

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d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz on 26 Sep 2023 11:36 next collapse

Article is paywalled. :/

mika@beehaw.org on 26 Sep 2023 12:56 next collapse

12ft to the rescue :) 12ft.io/proxy?q=https://www.theatlantic.com/techn…

d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz on 26 Sep 2023 13:33 collapse

406 Not Acceptable

BobbyBandwidth@lemmy.world on 26 Sep 2023 13:32 collapse

web.archive.org/web/20230918125648/…/675355/

d3Xt3r@lemmy.nz on 26 Sep 2023 13:34 collapse

This worked, thanks!

User_4272894@lemmy.world on 26 Sep 2023 11:42 next collapse

High fees, inconsistent/false advertising, burdensome chores? When was this article written, 2017? This has been the state of Airbnb for half its lifetime. There was a year, maybe two, at the very beginning where it truly was “crashing at your friend’s place”, in the same way Uber was “getting a ride from a friend”. Both have become full time corporate institutions with wage slaves pushing a product that’s somehow worse than the original problem (generally due to the lack of regulations around these “gig economy” alternatives), at the detriment of communities and others who attempted to make a living “playing by the rules”.

At this point, if you’re using Airbnb, not only are you impossibly ignorant of the problem, you’re actively contributing to it.

snooggums@kbin.social on 26 Sep 2023 18:20 collapse

"Lack of regulations" means ignoring existing regulations by insisting the new gig jobs aren't technically the same thing because "reasons."

Uber and Lyft were always taxis in everything except name.

[deleted] on 26 Sep 2023 15:36 next collapse

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Sinnerman@kbin.social on 26 Sep 2023 15:37 collapse

What a bland article. Just when it starts to become insightful, it ends:

These events are all signs of a gig economy that might just be falling apart, not because of any one CEO decision but because companies that find success by framing themselves as a DIY alternative to an established industry can only grow in the same direction as the very thing they wanted to replace. The original sin, it seems, is when they try to be both.