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VRBO fights disorderly party house bookings ahead of Super Bowl LVII

VRBO and Airbnb are cracking down on party renters ahead of the Super Bowl, including using new anti-party technology that involves motion and volume sensors.

Vacation rental site VRBO wants you to have a fun Super Bowl bash - just not in one of its thousands of listed properties.

The deployment of what it's calling a "new unauthorized event prevention technology" is responsible for blocking over 500 event-related bookings in the first 12 months of being piloted in the U.S.

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The Phoenix area has been testing ground for the anti-party technology for the past year ahead of Super Bowl LVII in cooperation with a local tourism group.

While I have not had the opportunity to put it to the test, VRBO says the technology generates a "risk score" for each booking based on multiple factors.

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An algorithm examines length of stay, the timing ahead of a stay, the number of guests, number of beds, property amenities and the weekday of the first night's stay.

VRBO offers little details on how it determines the cost of nuisance partygoers and claims that its first 500 blocked bookings saved an estimated $2.5 million in party-related damages.

It joins competitor Airbnb in sharing a database of known problematic renters along with deploying a party detection technology inside vacation rentals that can detect elevated disturbances.

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Monitoring sensors installed from NoiseAware can give real-time updates to property owners when loud living becomes costly noise trouble.

VRBO says it has a zero-tolerance policy for party houses and will ban a guest who has violated the published house rules and turns their vacation rental into a party house. Airbnb has a similar policy that can result in kicking off repeat party property listings permanently.

Dallas-based NoiseAware started in 2017 with the idea to offer property owners a monthly noise detection sensor and monitoring service now priced at $15 per month per home on an annual contract.

The technology balances out personal privacy against outrageous guest behaviors leading to a noisy ruckus disturbing a neighbor.

A recently introduced feature called CrowdControl measures the volume of wireless signals in and near the vacation rental. When it detects a growing crowd with cellphones in pockets, it sends the owner or manager an "elevated occupancy" alert. That's a pretty clever and sneaky way to discover the presence of lots of people. There's no information telling if putting guest phones in airplane mode would let partygoers trick the system.

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According to the company, NoiseAware sensors are FCC-compliant and do not record voices or sounds. That's not always the case with overly protective and curious property owners.

I've long found onsite cameras a privacy problem when renting a vacation rental. I customarily make sure ahead of time that there will be no monitoring cameras that record sound or video during my holiday.

Hosts are mostly compliant and a good roll of tape or a shower cap serves to block indoor cameras when we cannot find a way to unplug them.

For more of my tips, subscribe to my free CyberGuy Report Newsletter by clicking the "Free newsletter" link at the top of my website.

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