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Automated improvements: Multiple critical issues identified: (1) Factual error — article incorrectly states Chesky is 'former CEO' when he remains active CEO as of 2024-2025; (2) Fabricated/truncated citation with future access date must be fixed; (3) Founding story contains geographic inaccuracy about DNC; (4) Major omissions include 2020 IPO, 'founder mode' (2024), COVID layoffs, regulatory battles, and philanthropic record; (5) E-E-A-T gaps throughout with insufficient specific dates, figu...
 
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'''Brian Chesky''' is an American technology entrepreneur and designer best known as the co-founder and former chief executive officer of Airbnb, the online hospitality marketplace platform. Born in 1983, Chesky grew up in upstate New York and later relocated to San Francisco, where he co-founded Airbnb in 2008 alongside Joe Gebbia and Nathan Blecharczyk. The platform revolutionized short-term rental accommodations and travel experiences globally, becoming one of the most influential startups of the 21st century. Chesky served as CEO from Airbnb's founding through 2023 and has since remained involved with the company as Executive Chairman. His work has significantly impacted San Francisco's economy, housing market, and cultural landscape, making him a notable figure in the city's technology sector and entrepreneurial ecosystem.
'''Brian Chesky''' is an American technology entrepreneur and designer, best known as the co-founder and chief executive officer of Airbnb, the online short-term rental marketplace. Born in 1983, Chesky grew up in upstate New York and later moved to San Francisco, where he co-founded Airbnb in 2008 alongside Joe Gebbia and Nathan Blecharczyk. The platform transformed short-term rental accommodations and travel experiences globally. His work has shaped San Francisco's economy, housing market, and cultural landscape, making him a notable figure in the city's technology sector.


== History ==
== Early Life and Education ==


Brian Thomas Chesky was born on August 29, 1983, in Niskayuna, New York, a suburb of Albany in upstate New York. He grew up in a middle-class family with limited resources, which shaped his entrepreneurial ambitions and creative problem-solving approach from an early age. Chesky attended the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), one of the nation's most prestigious design schools, where he majored in Fine Arts and Industrial Design. His design background would prove instrumental in shaping Airbnb's user experience and brand identity. After graduating from RISD in 2006, Chesky moved to San Francisco to pursue opportunities in the emerging technology sector, a decision that positioned him at the epicenter of startup innovation during the mid-2000s.<ref>{{cite web |title=Brian Chesky Biography and Career Overview |url=https://www.sfgate.com/tech/article/brian-chesky-airbnb-founder-career-16234567.html |work=San Francisco Chronicle |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Brian Thomas Chesky was born on August 29, 1981, in Niskayuna, New York, a suburb of Albany in upstate New York. He attended the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), where he studied Fine Arts and Industrial Design. His design training proved central to shaping Airbnb's user experience and brand identity. After graduating from RISD in 2004, Chesky worked briefly as an industrial designer before relocating to San Francisco in 2007 to pursue opportunities in the technology sector.<ref>Leigh Gallagher, ''The Airbnb Story'' (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2017).</ref>


In 2008, Chesky and his roommate Joe Gebbia faced financial difficulties while living in San Francisco. To generate income, they purchased airbeds and rented them out during the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado, and later during design conferences in San Francisco. This modest experiment laid the groundwork for what would become Airbnb. Chesky, Gebbia, and engineer Nathan Blecharczyk officially founded Airbnb (originally called "Air Bed and Breakfast") in August 2008. The platform launched publicly on August 16, 2008, enabling individuals to list spare rooms or entire apartments for short-term rental. The early years were challenging, with the company struggling to gain traction and achieve profitability. Chesky's design expertise proved crucial in refining the platform's interface and user experience, distinguishing Airbnb from competitors. By 2010, the company had expanded to over 10,000 listings and began receiving significant venture capital funding, propelling it toward rapid growth and market expansion.<ref>{{cite web |title=Airbnb's Evolution: From Air Bed and Breakfast to Global Phenomenon |url=https://www.kqed.org/news/11892847/airbnb-san-francisco-impact |work=KQED |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
== Founding Airbnb ==
 
The origin of Airbnb was modest. In 2007, Chesky and his roommate Joe Gebbia were struggling to pay rent in their San Francisco apartment when a design conference came to the city and hotels sold out. They bought three air mattresses, rented out space in their apartment to conference attendees, and charged $80 a night. That experiment planted the seed. Chesky, Gebbia, and software engineer Nathan Blecharczyk officially founded Airbnb, originally called "Air Bed and Breakfast," in August 2008. The platform launched publicly that same month, enabling individuals to list spare rooms or entire homes for short-term rental.<ref>Leigh Gallagher, ''The Airbnb Story'' (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2017).</ref>
 
The early years weren't easy. The company struggled to gain traction and, at one point, the founders funded operations by selling novelty cereal boxes themed around the 2008 presidential election. Chesky's design background shaped the platform's interface and helped distinguish Airbnb from competitors. By 2010, the company had expanded to over 10,000 listings and began attracting venture capital, propelling rapid growth. By the time Airbnb filed its S-1 registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission in 2020, the platform had grown to more than 7.4 million listings across over 220 countries and regions.<ref>[https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1559720/000119312520294801/d81668ds1.htm "Airbnb S-1 Registration Statement"], ''U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission'', November 16, 2020.</ref>
 
Airbnb went public on December 10, 2020, in one of the largest technology IPOs of that year. The company's shares opened at $146, roughly double the IPO price of $68, giving it a market capitalization of around $100 billion at its peak. Chesky later described the day after the IPO as "the saddest day of his life," a remark he explained by saying he had spent years focused on the company's survival and mission, and the IPO felt like an endpoint to others when he saw it as a beginning.<ref>[https://finance.yahoo.com/news/airbnb-brian-chesky-says-ceos-150604289.html "Airbnb's Brian Chesky says CEOs don't have to be 'miserable'"], ''Yahoo Finance''.</ref>
 
== Leadership Philosophy ==
 
Chesky's approach to running Airbnb has drawn attention in tech circles for its unconventional character. He has spoken openly about eliminating unnecessary internal emails, discouraging meetings before 10 a.m., and maintaining deep personal involvement in product decisions rather than delegating them entirely to managers. He's argued that CEOs don't have to be "miserable" to be effective, pushing back against the notion that relentless self-sacrifice is a prerequisite for leadership.<ref>[https://finance.yahoo.com/news/airbnb-brian-chesky-says-ceos-150604289.html "Airbnb's Brian Chesky says CEOs don't have to be 'miserable'"], ''Yahoo Finance''.</ref>
 
In September 2024, Chesky became closely associated with the concept of "founder mode," a term drawn from a widely circulated essay by Y Combinator's Paul Graham that described Chesky's management style as a model. The idea, which contrasts a founder's hands-on involvement in operations against the more delegative "manager mode," spread rapidly across technology media and startup culture. Chesky had discussed similar themes in interviews for years, but the essay crystallized his approach into a framework that generated significant debate about how companies should be run. The conversation reached well beyond Silicon Valley, touching broader questions about organizational structure and executive leadership in the technology industry.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/31/business/airbnb-brian-chesky.html "What Is Airbnb For, Exactly?"], ''The New York Times'', May 31, 2026.</ref>
 
Chesky has also spoken about artificial intelligence as a transformative force for Airbnb, calling AI "the best thing that ever happened" to the company and describing plans to use it to reshape how travelers discover and book experiences.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TwiVY3M_W0E "Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky: AI is 'the best thing that ever happened'"], ''CNBC Television''.</ref>


== Economy ==
== Economy ==


Airbnb's rise under Chesky's leadership fundamentally transformed San Francisco's economy and urban landscape. The platform's success made San Francisco a magnet for technology investment, talent, and entrepreneurial activity. Between 2012 and 2023, Airbnb grew from a struggling startup into one of the world's most valuable hospitality companies, with valuations exceeding $100 billion at its peak. This growth created employment opportunities for thousands of individuals throughout the San Francisco Bay Area, spanning roles in technology, design, customer service, and operations. The company's IPO in December 2020 generated substantial wealth for Chesky and early investors, further reinforcing San Francisco's status as a global technology and venture capital center. Airbnb's corporate offices, located in the SoMa neighborhood of San Francisco, became an iconic symbol of the city's tech industry and attracted additional startups and service providers to the surrounding area.<ref>{{cite web |title=Airbnb IPO Impact on San Francisco Economy |url=https://www.sfgate.com/tech/article/airbnb-ipo-san-francisco-economy-impact-15902345.html |work=San Francisco Chronicle |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Airbnb's rise under Chesky's leadership transformed San Francisco's economy and urban landscape in lasting ways. The company's growth created employment across the San Francisco Bay Area in technology, design, customer service, and operations. Its corporate offices in the SoMa neighborhood became a symbol of the city's tech industry and drew additional startups and service businesses to the surrounding area. The December 2020 IPO generated substantial wealth for Chesky and early investors and reinforced San Francisco's standing as a global center for technology investment.<ref>[https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1559720/000119312520294801/d81668ds1.htm "Airbnb S-1 Registration Statement"], ''U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission'', November 16, 2020.</ref>


However, Airbnb's expansion also generated significant economic controversy in San Francisco. The platform contributed to rising housing costs and the conversion of long-term rental apartments into short-term vacation rentals, exacerbating the city's affordable housing crisis. Housing advocates and tenant organizations argued that Airbnb listings removed potential rental units from the long-term market, thereby reducing available housing for permanent residents and accelerating displacement. The San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed restrictive regulations limiting short-term rental activities, requiring hosts to register with the city and limiting the number of days properties could be rented annually. These regulations, implemented between 2014 and 2018, reflected ongoing tension between Chesky's company and San Francisco residents concerned about housing affordability. Chesky defended Airbnb's presence in San Francisco, arguing that the platform enabled homeowners and renters to generate supplementary income and that housing costs were driven by broader economic factors beyond the sharing economy. The debate surrounding Airbnb's economic impact continues to shape San Francisco's urban policy discussions and illustrates the complex effects of technology companies on urban development and community stability.
Not without controversy. Airbnb's expansion contributed to rising housing costs in San Francisco and the conversion of long-term rental units into short-term vacation rentals, deepening the city's affordable housing crisis. Housing advocates and tenant organizations argued that Airbnb listings removed units from the permanent rental market, reducing available housing for residents and accelerating displacement. The San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed regulations between 2014 and 2018 requiring hosts to register with the city and limiting the number of days a property could be rented annually. Chesky defended the platform, arguing that it allowed homeowners and renters to earn supplementary income and that broader economic conditions drove housing costs more than short-term rental activity. The debate shaped San Francisco's urban policy discussions for years and reflected ongoing tension between the platform economy and housing affordability in major cities. Airbnb faced similar regulatory battles in New York City, Barcelona, and other cities where local governments restricted or banned short-term rentals outright.
 
The COVID-19 pandemic represented the most severe test of Airbnb's business model. In May 2020, with travel at a near standstill, Chesky laid off approximately 1,900 employees, roughly 25 percent of the company's global workforce. The layoffs drew attention both for their scale and for the way Chesky handled the process, offering severance, extended health coverage, and a public talent directory to help departing employees find new positions. The company's subsequent recovery, culminating in the December 2020 IPO, was widely cited as a significant business turnaround.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/31/business/airbnb-brian-chesky.html "What Is Airbnb For, Exactly?"], ''The New York Times'', May 31, 2026.</ref>


== Culture ==
== Culture ==


Brian Chesky's influence on San Francisco's culture extends beyond Airbnb's direct business operations to encompass broader attitudes toward design, hospitality, and urban connection. Chesky's commitment to design excellence became central to Airbnb's brand identity and organizational culture, establishing design thinking as a core corporate value. This emphasis on user-centered design and aesthetic refinement influenced how San Francisco's technology companies approached product development and branding during the 2010s and 2020s. Airbnb's marketing campaigns, which celebrated travelers' experiences and promoted cultural exchange and connection, shaped narratives about tourism and urban exploration that influenced how visitors and residents perceived San Francisco. The company's "Belong Anywhere" campaign and its celebration of diverse destinations and hosts resonated with progressive values embraced by significant segments of San Francisco's population.<ref>{{cite web |title=Airbnb's Cultural Impact and Design Philosophy |url=https://www.kqed.org/culture/13445782/airbnb-design-culture-san-francisco |work=KQED |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref>
Brian Chesky's influence on San Francisco's culture extends beyond Airbnb's direct business operations. His background at RISD, an institution focused on design rather than computer science, distinguished him from many of his contemporaries in technology and helped establish design thinking as a legitimate foundation for building a large technology company. That influence spread across the industry during the 2010s, as user experience and visual identity became central concerns for startups and established companies alike.


Chesky's philanthropic efforts and public statements have also contributed to cultural discourse in San Francisco regarding inequality, diversity, and social responsibility. Following racial discrimination allegations on the Airbnb platform and widespread protests in 2016, Chesky committed to implementing anti-discrimination policies and launched diversity and inclusion initiatives. He pledged to address systemic bias within the platform and company culture, though implementation and effectiveness remained subjects of ongoing scrutiny and debate. Chesky's involvement in various cultural and educational initiatives, including support for design education and innovation hubs in San Francisco, reinforced his positioning as a cultural figure beyond his business role. His younger profile and design-oriented background helped establish a more accessible public persona for technology leadership compared to previous generations of CEOs, contributing to evolving narratives about what successful entrepreneurs and leaders could represent in contemporary San Francisco culture.
Airbnb's marketing, particularly its "Belong Anywhere" campaign, shaped narratives about travel, cultural exchange, and urban experience. The campaign's tone resonated with values held across large segments of San Francisco's population and framed the platform not merely as a booking tool but as a vehicle for human connection. The messaging was effective, though it also drew criticism from housing advocates who argued it obscured the platform's economic effects on local communities.
 
Following racial discrimination complaints on the Airbnb platform and protests in 2016, Chesky committed publicly to anti-discrimination policies and launched diversity and inclusion programs within the company. The response was notable for its speed and the personal tone Chesky adopted, though the effectiveness of those measures remained a subject of debate among civil rights organizations and researchers studying discrimination in the sharing economy. His support for design education and innovation programs in San Francisco further positioned him as a cultural figure beyond his business role.


== Notable People ==
== Notable People ==


Brian Chesky's significance within San Francisco's entrepreneurial and technology ecosystem positions him among the most notable figures in the city's 21st-century history. As the co-founder and former CEO of Airbnb, Chesky ranks alongside other transformative technology leaders who have shaped San Francisco's development and global influence. His peer group includes other prominent Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and executives who founded or led companies that redefined industries and generated billions in market value. Within the design and user experience communities, Chesky is recognized as a pioneering figure who demonstrated how design education and principles could drive technological innovation and market success. His educational background at RISD distinguished him from many of his contemporaries in technology, where computer science and engineering credentials traditionally dominated. Chesky's mentorship relationships and his influence on emerging entrepreneurs in San Francisco have extended his cultural impact beyond Airbnb's direct business sphere, making him a relevant figure in discussions about entrepreneurial education, leadership development, and the future of technology-driven urban development in San Francisco.
Brian Chesky's significance within San Francisco's entrepreneurial and technology community positions him among the most notable figures in the city's 21st-century history. As the co-founder and CEO of Airbnb, he ranks alongside other technology leaders who shaped San Francisco's development and global influence. Within design and user experience communities, he's recognized as a figure who showed how design education could drive large-scale technological success. His educational background at RISD set him apart from peers whose credentials were typically rooted in computer science or engineering.


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Chesky's mentorship relationships and his public presence in conversations about entrepreneurship have extended his reach beyond Airbnb's operations directly. His 2024 association with the "founder mode" concept brought renewed attention to his management philosophy and added a new dimension to his public profile, one tied less to a specific company and more to broader ideas about how technology businesses should be led and organized.
 
{{#seo: |title=Brian Chesky | San Francisco.Wiki |description=Co-founder and CEO of Airbnb, transforming San Francisco's economy and tourism landscape through technology and design. |type=Article }}
[[Category:San Francisco landmarks]]
[[Category:San Francisco landmarks]]
[[Category:San Francisco history]]
[[Category:San Francisco history]]
== References ==
<references />

Latest revision as of 03:16, 3 June 2026

Brian Chesky is an American technology entrepreneur and designer, best known as the co-founder and chief executive officer of Airbnb, the online short-term rental marketplace. Born in 1983, Chesky grew up in upstate New York and later moved to San Francisco, where he co-founded Airbnb in 2008 alongside Joe Gebbia and Nathan Blecharczyk. The platform transformed short-term rental accommodations and travel experiences globally. His work has shaped San Francisco's economy, housing market, and cultural landscape, making him a notable figure in the city's technology sector.

Early Life and Education

Brian Thomas Chesky was born on August 29, 1981, in Niskayuna, New York, a suburb of Albany in upstate New York. He attended the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), where he studied Fine Arts and Industrial Design. His design training proved central to shaping Airbnb's user experience and brand identity. After graduating from RISD in 2004, Chesky worked briefly as an industrial designer before relocating to San Francisco in 2007 to pursue opportunities in the technology sector.[1]

Founding Airbnb

The origin of Airbnb was modest. In 2007, Chesky and his roommate Joe Gebbia were struggling to pay rent in their San Francisco apartment when a design conference came to the city and hotels sold out. They bought three air mattresses, rented out space in their apartment to conference attendees, and charged $80 a night. That experiment planted the seed. Chesky, Gebbia, and software engineer Nathan Blecharczyk officially founded Airbnb, originally called "Air Bed and Breakfast," in August 2008. The platform launched publicly that same month, enabling individuals to list spare rooms or entire homes for short-term rental.[2]

The early years weren't easy. The company struggled to gain traction and, at one point, the founders funded operations by selling novelty cereal boxes themed around the 2008 presidential election. Chesky's design background shaped the platform's interface and helped distinguish Airbnb from competitors. By 2010, the company had expanded to over 10,000 listings and began attracting venture capital, propelling rapid growth. By the time Airbnb filed its S-1 registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission in 2020, the platform had grown to more than 7.4 million listings across over 220 countries and regions.[3]

Airbnb went public on December 10, 2020, in one of the largest technology IPOs of that year. The company's shares opened at $146, roughly double the IPO price of $68, giving it a market capitalization of around $100 billion at its peak. Chesky later described the day after the IPO as "the saddest day of his life," a remark he explained by saying he had spent years focused on the company's survival and mission, and the IPO felt like an endpoint to others when he saw it as a beginning.[4]

Leadership Philosophy

Chesky's approach to running Airbnb has drawn attention in tech circles for its unconventional character. He has spoken openly about eliminating unnecessary internal emails, discouraging meetings before 10 a.m., and maintaining deep personal involvement in product decisions rather than delegating them entirely to managers. He's argued that CEOs don't have to be "miserable" to be effective, pushing back against the notion that relentless self-sacrifice is a prerequisite for leadership.[5]

In September 2024, Chesky became closely associated with the concept of "founder mode," a term drawn from a widely circulated essay by Y Combinator's Paul Graham that described Chesky's management style as a model. The idea, which contrasts a founder's hands-on involvement in operations against the more delegative "manager mode," spread rapidly across technology media and startup culture. Chesky had discussed similar themes in interviews for years, but the essay crystallized his approach into a framework that generated significant debate about how companies should be run. The conversation reached well beyond Silicon Valley, touching broader questions about organizational structure and executive leadership in the technology industry.[6]

Chesky has also spoken about artificial intelligence as a transformative force for Airbnb, calling AI "the best thing that ever happened" to the company and describing plans to use it to reshape how travelers discover and book experiences.[7]

Economy

Airbnb's rise under Chesky's leadership transformed San Francisco's economy and urban landscape in lasting ways. The company's growth created employment across the San Francisco Bay Area in technology, design, customer service, and operations. Its corporate offices in the SoMa neighborhood became a symbol of the city's tech industry and drew additional startups and service businesses to the surrounding area. The December 2020 IPO generated substantial wealth for Chesky and early investors and reinforced San Francisco's standing as a global center for technology investment.[8]

Not without controversy. Airbnb's expansion contributed to rising housing costs in San Francisco and the conversion of long-term rental units into short-term vacation rentals, deepening the city's affordable housing crisis. Housing advocates and tenant organizations argued that Airbnb listings removed units from the permanent rental market, reducing available housing for residents and accelerating displacement. The San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed regulations between 2014 and 2018 requiring hosts to register with the city and limiting the number of days a property could be rented annually. Chesky defended the platform, arguing that it allowed homeowners and renters to earn supplementary income and that broader economic conditions drove housing costs more than short-term rental activity. The debate shaped San Francisco's urban policy discussions for years and reflected ongoing tension between the platform economy and housing affordability in major cities. Airbnb faced similar regulatory battles in New York City, Barcelona, and other cities where local governments restricted or banned short-term rentals outright.

The COVID-19 pandemic represented the most severe test of Airbnb's business model. In May 2020, with travel at a near standstill, Chesky laid off approximately 1,900 employees, roughly 25 percent of the company's global workforce. The layoffs drew attention both for their scale and for the way Chesky handled the process, offering severance, extended health coverage, and a public talent directory to help departing employees find new positions. The company's subsequent recovery, culminating in the December 2020 IPO, was widely cited as a significant business turnaround.[9]

Culture

Brian Chesky's influence on San Francisco's culture extends beyond Airbnb's direct business operations. His background at RISD, an institution focused on design rather than computer science, distinguished him from many of his contemporaries in technology and helped establish design thinking as a legitimate foundation for building a large technology company. That influence spread across the industry during the 2010s, as user experience and visual identity became central concerns for startups and established companies alike.

Airbnb's marketing, particularly its "Belong Anywhere" campaign, shaped narratives about travel, cultural exchange, and urban experience. The campaign's tone resonated with values held across large segments of San Francisco's population and framed the platform not merely as a booking tool but as a vehicle for human connection. The messaging was effective, though it also drew criticism from housing advocates who argued it obscured the platform's economic effects on local communities.

Following racial discrimination complaints on the Airbnb platform and protests in 2016, Chesky committed publicly to anti-discrimination policies and launched diversity and inclusion programs within the company. The response was notable for its speed and the personal tone Chesky adopted, though the effectiveness of those measures remained a subject of debate among civil rights organizations and researchers studying discrimination in the sharing economy. His support for design education and innovation programs in San Francisco further positioned him as a cultural figure beyond his business role.

Notable People

Brian Chesky's significance within San Francisco's entrepreneurial and technology community positions him among the most notable figures in the city's 21st-century history. As the co-founder and CEO of Airbnb, he ranks alongside other technology leaders who shaped San Francisco's development and global influence. Within design and user experience communities, he's recognized as a figure who showed how design education could drive large-scale technological success. His educational background at RISD set him apart from peers whose credentials were typically rooted in computer science or engineering.

Chesky's mentorship relationships and his public presence in conversations about entrepreneurship have extended his reach beyond Airbnb's operations directly. His 2024 association with the "founder mode" concept brought renewed attention to his management philosophy and added a new dimension to his public profile, one tied less to a specific company and more to broader ideas about how technology businesses should be led and organized.

References

  1. Leigh Gallagher, The Airbnb Story (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2017).
  2. Leigh Gallagher, The Airbnb Story (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2017).
  3. "Airbnb S-1 Registration Statement", U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, November 16, 2020.
  4. "Airbnb's Brian Chesky says CEOs don't have to be 'miserable'", Yahoo Finance.
  5. "Airbnb's Brian Chesky says CEOs don't have to be 'miserable'", Yahoo Finance.
  6. "What Is Airbnb For, Exactly?", The New York Times, May 31, 2026.
  7. "Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky: AI is 'the best thing that ever happened'", CNBC Television.
  8. "Airbnb S-1 Registration Statement", U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, November 16, 2020.
  9. "What Is Airbnb For, Exactly?", The New York Times, May 31, 2026.