Hidden Brain - Update: #AirbnbWhileBlack
Episode Date: September 20, 2016A few months ago, Hidden Brain investigated claims that Airbnb users were facing discrimination on the platform. Now, we bring you an update on the company's response. ...
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantan.
Earlier this month, a man named Brian Chesky sent out an email that began like this.
At the heart of our mission, he wrote, is the idea that people are fundamentally good
and every community is a place where you can belong.
Chesky is the CEO and co-founder of Airbnb, the online marketplace that connects travelers
with people looking to rent their homes.
Chesky's email, Center Users Across the Globe, was a response to concerns about racial
bias.
Some guests say they've experienced prejudice while trying to book rooms on Airbnb.
We first explored these complaints in the spring in an episode titled Airbnb
Wild Black. Today we're going to bring you that episode again with a few updates to reflect
changes the company says it's making.
We'll begin not with Airbnb, but with another online platform you may have heard of, Facebook.
So a few months back, I was on Facebook when a friend request came in.
I don't have a great memory for faces and names, so I found myself trying to figure out if I had met this person somewhere.
But then, at the back of my mind, I remembered a study.
It said my friendship choices on Facebook might be shaped by biases outside of my conscious awareness.
Michelle Hebel is a psychologist at Rice University who ran the Facebook study.
She designed fictitious Facebook profiles
for two men and two women.
Both men were named Michael Davis, both women were Jennifer Davis.
All the characters were African-American.
The only real difference between the profiles were the photos.
One Photoshop version of Michael Davis and Jennifer Davis had lighter skin, the other Photoshop
version had lighter skin, the other Photoshop version had darker
skin.
Mickey Hebel sent out friend requests on behalf of these fictitious characters to more
than a thousand people in a big American city.
Since these were invented characters, most of the requests were declined.
But there was a big disparity in how often whites accepted friend requests from the darker
skin, Michaels and Jennifer's. This is a great disparity in how often whites accepted friend requests from the darker skin
Michaels and Jennifer's.
People were less likely to friend them.
They were less likely particularly to friend the dark black males.
If you follow these kinds of experiments, this finding is disappointing, but not surprising.
Using similar experimental methods, researchers have found disparities in the way
professors spend time with students,
how companies select job applicants for interviews,
even how legislators respond to constituents.
But something new is happening today.
The bias decisions we once made in interpersonal settings
are now being made on giant online platforms
where our actions have the potential to affect many more people. and interpersonal settings are now being made on giant online platforms,
where our actions have the potential to affect many more people.
Think about the way you might look for a roommate.
Once upon a time, you may have put up a flyer on a bulletin board
and talk to people who responded.
Today, you might turn to sites such as roommates.com or Craigslist.
Raj Goshaal, a sociologist at Gautier College in Baltimore, recently conducted a roommate study on Craigslist. Raj Gosha, a sociologist at Gautcher College in Baltimore, recently
conducted a roommate study on Craigslist using a technique similar to the one Mickey
Hebel used on Facebook. We definitely found a pattern of preference
or bias in favor of white sounding names. So for every 100 replies that a white sounding
name got a Latina name, got about 75, and an African-American name got about 65 or something like that.
That is a huge difference.
It's a pretty big difference, right?
So if you're African-American,
you'd have to spend about one and a half times,
as much time, applying for housing
as when somebody with a white name.
On today's podcast, we're going to delve into what happens
when age-old biases rear their heads
in a new and growing part of our lives.
What sometimes called the sharing economy.
It's one thing if I want to discriminate about who I'm going to have over on Friday night
to have for dinner or who I want to have sleep over.
But it's another thing when my private house starts to become my business.
The sharing economy platforms that allow you to hail a taxi, call a babysitter, find a room on Airbnb, rely on making what used to be business exchanges into semi-personal transactions.
Your Uber driver sees your name and photograph. You see your driver's name and photo. It's supposed to increase trust, and there's every reason to think it does. But it also does something else.
When you give people names, then you give people information about your ethnicity. It's supposed to increase trust and there's every reason to think it does. But it also does something else.
When you give people names, then you give people information about your ethnicity.
You give people information that they can use to look you up and figure out more cues about you.
And that becomes problematic.
Mickey was on a ship when I interviewed her. She's teaching at Semester at C.
During the long voyage, she says, her students tell her about the many online platforms
that they are using.
There's a website called care.com.
And it's a babysitting website where people advertise themselves
as babysitters.
And they have to put a picture of themselves on.
So you can think about how, again, maybe I don't
want a babysitter that is of that race.
Maybe I don't want a babysitter that is of that race. Maybe I don't want a babysitter that is of that gender.
And so you begin to see where this very subtle type of discrimination can be very systemic.
The sharing economy is unleashing new possibilities in our lives.
These platforms allow us to meet more people, visit more places, get more connected.
I'm personally a fan of many apps.
But it also seems clear to me that these platforms provide a mechanism to amplify our collective bias.
What's especially insidious about the biases on these platforms is that their consequences are largely hidden.
If your request to be a babysitter gets turned down, you have no way of knowing if this was driven by racial bias.
So I asked Hidden Brain producers Maggie Pennman and Max Nestrak to take a few weeks and
try to find people who were personally affected by such biases.
They decided to focus on an important new part of the sharing economy, Airbnb.
Imagine you're going on vacation with some friends.
You do a quick search online, find a few hotels in the city you'd like to stay in.
You pick one, ideally with a hot tub, and enter your credit card information.
Great, you think.
I'll set.
But then you get an email.
We're sorry, but the dates you just booked aren't available after all.
They're listed by mistake.
Now, if this happened to you once, you might chalk it up to a weird website glitch.
But if it happened to you over and over,
something would start to feel funny.
You might start to feel like it's something about you
that's making these hotels suddenly unavailable.
This is exactly how Christina Crittenden felt
when she would try to use Airbnb
to book vacations with her friends.
She would find a house that was listed as available,
send a booking request.
And I would get declined all the time.
Kertina got a bunch of similar responses.
The host would always come up with excuses like,
oh, someone actually just booked it.
Or oh, some of my regulars are coming in town
and they're going to stay there.
I just haven't updated my calendar.
But I got suspicious when I would check back like days later
and see that those
dates are still available.
Christina is black, and this is relevant because on Airbnb, both hosts and guests have their
names and photos prominently displayed on their profiles.
And this is actually one of the platform's selling points.
It's supposed to make these transactions between strangers feel less anonymous and less scary.
But it also makes Christina start to wonder if these rejections had something to do with her race.
My name is Cortina.
I have a very black sounding name,
and I also had my photo, so I'm very clearly a black woman.
And when she looked at the reviews
that previous guests had left for these hosts,
I never saw anybody who looked like me.
So Cortina did what any good millennial does
when they're frustrated.
She took to Twitter.
And I was just venting my frustrations and I just included a lot of screenshots of the
messages that I was getting from people and I put the hashtag Airbnb wall black.
She started hearing from lots of friends with similar experiences.
The most common response that I got was, oh yeah, that's why I don't use my photo.
Like duh.
Like I was the late one.
And one friend who hadn't.
One of my friends who was actually black,
he responded to me and said,
well, I've never had an issue.
And then he went back and checked his profile.
And I guess he'd never want to use his photo.
So he realized that the whole time he had been using a photo back and checked his profile and I guess he'd never want to use his photo so he
realized that the whole time he had been using a photo of some random white guy
from our school and so he's like oh maybe this is why I've never had an issue.
So Koutina decided to tweak her profile. I shortened my name to Justina which is
a name that I go by in work and in other settings.
And I changed my photo to a landscape.
Ever since I changed my name and my photo,
I've never had any issues on Airbnb.
Now it's impossible to say exactly why
Kertina was rejected by those specific hosts.
But a recent study shows racial discrimination on Airbnb is widespread.
I'm Michael Luka. I'm a faculty member at Harvard Business School.
I'm an assistant professor of business administration.
Michael Luka and his colleagues, Benjamin Adelman and Dan Sivirski,
sent out fake Airbnb requests to real-life hosts.
So we sent out 6,400 requests to stay with people
and we kept every request the same.
The only thing that was different about the requests,
the profiles attached them either had African- American sounding names or white sounding names.
So like, does Brad get the same number of responses on Airbnb as Jamal?
We could see that there was a very different response rate and acceptance rate for African
American guests relative to white guests.
Having an African American name leads to roughly a 15% lower chance of being accepted as a guest
on Airbnb relative to having a distinctively white name holding all else constant.
To put this in perspective, Airbnb isn't some little startup anymore.
It's one of the largest players in the hotel industry worldwide.
In 2015, more than 2 million listings were offered on the platform from hosts around the
world.
That's nearly four times as many rooms as the Married Hotel chain.
You can even run to Castle.
And it's not just vacation rentals.
People are finding housing on this platform for months at a time.
So discrimination on Airbnb is discrimination in the housing market.
Michael Luka and his colleagues think people could be discriminating without even knowing
it.
Buying a lot of people is something that is accidental.
What Michael Lucas is talking about is unconscious bias.
These hidden associations we have that affect our behavior without us realizing it.
It's unlikely that most hosts are saying to themselves, I'm going to reject this person
because I don't want to write to a black person.
I mean, maybe some people are intentionally discriminating.
There are probably some people like that, but Michael Lucas suspects the way Airbnb's
platform is designed is triggering the associations people have of some racial groups.
So because names and photos are the first thing people see, it may also be one of the first
things they consider consciously or unconsciously when choosing a place to stay.
He and his colleagues looked at five major cities in the US, and discrimination was happening across the board.
We saw that there is discrimination among cheap listings,
expensive listings, in diverse neighborhoods,
in homogenous neighborhoods, among white hosts,
and among African American hosts.
I actually spoke to Mike Luca last week.
That's David King, the brand new director of diversity
and belonging at Airbnb.
He knows this is a problem, and he wants Airbnb to be a leader on fixing it.
There is a racial bias in platforms, and we are working with Mike Luca and any other external interested parties.
And how do we address and fix this problem?
David King also pointed out there's a lot of opportunity for Airbnb to do good.
They're bringing together people from all different backgrounds who wouldn't normally
meet.
We've done some recent reports in Chicago and New York pointing out that underserved communities,
especially African-American communities, have benefited quite a bit from our platform,
usually in neighborhoods where there are few hotels.
One of those neighborhoods with few hotels lies east of the Anacostia River in
Washington, D.C. There are lots of big box stores and empty lots, but also row houses and families
that go back generations. We went there to visit Airbnb host Sinta Keeling. Hi, how are you?
Sinta owns a three-story townhouse in a new development. She rents out two rooms on Airbnb.
There's a fitness room, cable and high-speed internet, solar panels, and slippers for all
of her guests.
I love the slippers, first of all.
So, I do know.
Sinta is a super host, and we're not just saying that because of the slippers.
It's an official designation she's earned from Airbnb.
Based on positive reviews from her guests, her responsiveness to booking requests, and the fact that she's never canceled a booking.
It shows Airbnb travelers should've been verified
as a good person to stay with.
Sintis says, as a black host in a black neighborhood,
that's important.
She feels like she gets held to a higher standard
than other hosts.
This neighborhood is called Capitol View,
and it's 98% African-American, double digit unemployment.
We asked Sintinta whether her race
and the racial composition of her neighborhood
made it harder to get gas.
And she said,
Absolutely.
Yeah, no, I had one.
I've had some instances where people ask me
all these questions about it's unsafe.
And I'll say, you know, I'm a black Filipino woman.
I think we take great pride in our community.
This is absolutely a good place for
you to stay and I'll say those things and then they'll be crickets. They'll just not book."
But Sinta also said there were great things about Airbnb. For one thing, it brings her a study
second income. Airbnb brings business to the stores and restaurants that don't typically
benefit from the tourism industry. Airbnb slogan is,
belong anywhere. And there's some truth to it. S Cindy Keeling told us a story about one of her guests that drove this message home.
He came back from being out for the day and told her,
I took the bus back and I was the only white person on the bus.
And it was all these black people. And I asked myself, were they going to hurt me?
Am I unsafe?
And then I realized they weren't hurting me.
And nothing was going to happen to me.
Like they were just sitting there normal.
And he was saying this in a way that he was like,
he mentally realized the hardness of what he was saying
with the same time he was just being honest about what he was like he mentally realized the horridness of what he was saying with the same time he was
just being honest about what he was thinking and that he arrived at the stop and just said come off
and like nothing had happened to him and it was just the shock.
Since it's how she knows that some people won't rent from her because she's a black host
in a predominantly black neighborhood. But here's the thing, she's glad those people don't book with her.
The strange thing about Airbnb makes it tough is I really don't want a racist
gastin my house because I don't I live here in this space so I don't need to
feel uncomfortable you know the other way but if if if you just feel like well
you know maybe I'll give this a shot that I'm willing to be open-minded.
feel like, well, you know, maybe I'll give this a shot that I'm willing to be open-minded. The fact is, Airbnb is not the same thing as a major hotel chain.
Hosts have discretion on the platform, but guests don't have the same legal recourse
as hotel customers if they feel they've been discriminated against.
We spoke to a couple lawyers for this story, and the legal picture is a little murky here.
It isn't clear who, if anyone, is liable for discrimination
on a web-based platform.
So Airbnb does offer this opportunity
to experience different cultures
to meet people you wouldn't normally meet.
But sometimes, hidden biases getting in the way.
And people like Kirtina and Sinta are paying the price. [♪ Music playing inman and Max Nestrak.
When we come back, Maggie and I are going to talk about the steps Airbnb is taking to
address these issues since our story first aired in April.
Stay with us.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanthan.
We're exploring the many ways in which the sharing economy might allow hidden biases
to flourish.
As apps in the sharing economy become an increasingly large part of our lives, they have the potential
to create great disparities.
The latest twist on the age-old problem of cabs that don't stop to pick up black people.
A lot has happened since our story first aired.
The hashtag Croutina started Airbnb While Black when viral.
News organizations all over the country picked up the story.
Airbnb hired a team of heavy hitters to address these issues, including Laura Murphy of the
ACLU and Eric Holder, the former Attorney General.
They conducted a 90-day review to look at the problem and they've just released a report
announcing changes based on their findings.
I'm in the studio now with Maggie Penman to talk a little bit about this issue and get
an update on what Airbnb is doing.
Hi Maggie.
Hey Shankar.
Back when we aired this episode, Maggie, Airbnb was already offering away for hosts
and guests to get around possible prejudice. That's right. The platform has long offered
this feature called Instant Book. And normally when you want to book a place on Airbnb,
you have to put in a request and the host accepts or denies it. But with Instant Book,
you are accepted immediately. And one of the big changes that they just announced is
the company is planning to make this feature much more widely available.
Let me try and understand this. What would incentivize hosts to offer this option?
Well, it's much more convenient for guests, so I think you're more likely to get your
place booked. And it can also be more convenient for hosts. Let's say you're renting out your
whole home. Instant book might just be easier for you. Max and I talked with someone who
used this feature to circumvent what he saw as discrimination.
Very much like Christina Crittenden, Reed Kennedy is African-American and he says he was having trouble getting his requests accepted.
And so after being rejected, I think in that case, four times within the same day for reasons again that weren't specified. I started to see a pattern. He complained to Airbnb and Airbnb gave him a credit. But of course, if your problem
is that you are not able to book a place, getting a credit to book another place doesn't
really help you very much. So he tried the instant book feature.
And ironically, the host was a black man who may have been using the instant book
feature for the same reason I was.
Airbnb said in their statement that they hope to have a million listings available
for instant book by January and they think this is going to start to address some of these problems.
So in some ways this could be a design solution for the psychological problem of bias.
Right and this is similar to a solution Michael Luca came up with, that's the researcher at Harvard.
He worked with a computer scientist to develop a Google Chrome plugin called Debiased Yourself.
And it removes photos and names from people's profiles so users can't discriminate even by accident.
He said he actually got this idea from Orkis Tres.
It used to be that Orkis Tres were overwhelmingly male, and many people might have thought,
oh well, maybe they're just more male musicians, or maybe they're just better than female musicians.
But then this started to shift, and orchestra's became more and more gender-balanced.
When a couple of researchers tried to figure out why, they found that many auditions had
switched to being blind, which meant judges had gone from watching the performers to just
listening to them play from behind a screen.
Mike Luka thinks that Airbnb should be doing the same thing on a larger scale.
And this step of increasing Instant Book is sort of moving in that direction.
One of the things that I love about the digital world is that it gives us the opportunity to choose exactly where to put screens
and where not to put screens.
So I think we have a host of new decisions
that we can make as market designers that will decide how inclusive a society we have
or how much discrimination we want to encourage or allow.
Here's the interesting thing Maggie, one of the attractive things about Airbnb and the
sharing economy in general is that people don't feel like they're walking into an anonymous
place. You know, they feel like they know the people with whom they're renting a home.
So there's some balance between hiding information from people and revealing information
that can exacerbate these biases. I remember talking to Raj Goshal,
this is the sociologist who did the study looking at racial disparities in roommate searches.
He told me that maybe the focus should be on playing up some kinds
of information.
Perhaps colleges and universities can play a role in this and perhaps websites like Craigslist
or roommates.com could do more to actually like front load information about people's
living habits or cultural identities, what time people get up and go to bed, what level
of messy they are, that sort of thing. Rather than immediately hitting people over the head with somebody's name, just
because all the evidence we have, evidence from other studies just suggests that race
in names is such a powerful signal to people that we probably don't actually want it to
be the first thing or the immediate thing that people see in our deciding by.
That's a really interesting point.
I think that's why Airbnb hasn't done what some people were suggesting,
which was to totally eliminate names or photos,
because that lack of anonymity is definitely part of the appeal.
Is the company doing anything else to try and eliminate discrimination?
Yeah, so in addition to building up that instant book option,
they're also asking everyone who uses the platform to commit to a stronger,
non-discrimination policy.
And they're working on an anti-biased training that's going to be offered on the site.
But the most radical thing they're doing is implementing what they call an open doors
policy.
If any person anywhere in the world feels they can't get a booking because they're being
discriminated against, Airbnb will find them a similar place to stay.
If there isn't anything available on Airbnb,
they'll find accommodation for the malware.
So this is clearly an effort to address concerns
about discrimination, but a policy like this
would really only help guests who are having
trouble booking a room, not hosts who are trying
to rent a room.
The company said in the statement,
this is the beginning, not the end of their effort
to combat bias, so maybe in the coming months we'll see features or policies
designed to help host too.
That's interesting. Thanks so much Maggie.
Thanks Shankar.
This episode of the Hidden Brain Podcast was produced by Maggie Penman and Max Nestrak.
Our supervising producer is Tara Boyle.
René Clare manages our Facebook and Twitter pages.
Check out the hashtag, Cortina Started, Airbnb While Black.
An incredible conversation has unfolded there over the last few months.
I'm Shankar Vetantham Anthony and this is NPR.