A robot startup is wreaking havoc on short-term rentals in San Francisco — Airbnb hosts allege 'guests' secretly tested robots indoors, left the units completely trashed
A $12,000 lawsuit has been filed by one of the hosts.
A $2 billion San Fransico startup called "The Bot Company" seems to be secretly testing robots in short-term rentals. Multiple Airbnb hosts report their units have been left in poor condition, with similar signs of damage forming a pattern across the area. One host in particular, Sean Donovan, is even suing for $12,383.50 in damages and lost income stemming from a commercial booking. The Bot Company hasn't responded so far.
The story starts with Sean accepting an 11-night stay for 8 people in April. Everything seemed fine at first, but when the host went to take out the trash, he found a deluge of black wires inside and a person sitting next to what appeared to be a robot. Ring camera security footage further revealed that large black cases were regularly siphoned in and out of the house, likely carrying testing equipment. After checkout, Sean found his place to be completely trashed.
The furniture was stained; the dishwasher was damaged; the bathroom tiles had cracked; an entire shoe rack was gone, and the crockery was found everywhere but the kitchen cabinets it came from. After some digging, Sean discovered he wasn't the only one affected by such careless guests. In fact, several properties in the areas seemed to have been graced by the presence of these robot testers.
A bunch of hosts had left negative reviews for guests with similar complaints, and that's how Sean was able to connect the dots. He understood his place was used as a secret testing ground for The Bot Company's robot, despite only renting it for residential purposes. Sean has since filed a lawsuit against the startup, seeking $12,383.50 as compensation for not just the mess, but also the dishonesty.
“If they had come straight up, ‘Hey, we would like to rent your house for testing of our robot,’ then we could have come to an agreement. But it’s the lying and the misrepresentation that makes me feel violated,” Sean told the San Fransico Standard. The host has sued The Bot Company specifically, and not the guests themselves, since his research has led him to believe they were employees of the firm.
The Bot Company largely works under secrecy. It is led by Kyle Vogt, the former CEO of the robotaxi outfit "Cruise," who also co-founded Justin.tv, which later became Twitch. Vogt resigned as CEO of Cruise in 2013 following an autonomous vehicle accident that suspended the company's license in California. He co-founded The Bot Company in 2024, which has already raised $150 million in a seed round at a $2 billion valuation.
The Bot Company does not have a public product yet, but its mission statement is to build one that can help around the house. Instead of propping up large test fields, the startup seems to be sticking to local Airbnb rentals for a more realistic environment. The only issue is that it doesn't tell the hosts of these rentals what it's doing before booking and then leaves those places looking like they'd just been robbed.
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“Sorry :( Did my best!"
As we mentioned earlier, Sean Donovan's experience is just one of many that share striking similarities. The San Fransico Standard report highlights how at least 12 other hosts have given poor reviews to three of the guests from Sean's booking. One case in particular stands out: a historic late-Victorian-era home was vandalized. The fridge exterior was left cracked, the walls had black streaks, there was broken glass in the garbage, chipped paint on the doors, and the crockery was rearranged once again.
The guests left a whiteboard with a written message saying "Sorry :( Did my best!" At first, the host imagined they must have had a party, but the neighbors confirmed they saw large black cases being carried in and out of the house. "The robot thing kind of makes sense now," said the host after realizing those black boxes were not housing filmmaking gear as he'd initially thought. Airbnb rejected the host's damage claims.
Sacra, a platform tracking startups, says The Bot Company does have a prototype that looks like " a coffee table on wheels." It can apparently pick up and organize household items on its own through its articulated arm and dual grippers. The San Fransico Standard article includes pictures of this prototype captured on Sean's Ring camera, and it looks a bit uncanny, especially given the camera's low-quality processing.
There are more testimonies with identical accusations, but it's unclear whether all of them understood what was actually happening. Turning short-term rentals into 24/7 robot labs under the pretense of residence borders on illegality since you're breaking several laws and could be on the hook for fraudulent inducement, violating zoning laws, and committing civil fraud. We should find that out as the lawsuit unfolds.
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Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.
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alrighty_then Makes sense a robot company would leverage Air BnB to jump into various housing environments, but trashing them is not permissible. San Fran problems.Reply -
Notton On the one hand, that robot startup deserves to be trashed onReply
On the other hand, AirBnB and using residential housing as a hotel should also not be a thing
But then again, this is SF, where the government allows Waymo to block firetrucks and run over kids, with no oversight. -
Co BIY ReplyNotton said:On the one hand, that robot startup deserves to be trashed on
On the other hand, AirBnB and using residential housing as a hotel should also not be a thing
But then again, this is SF, where the government allows Waymo to block firetrucks and run over kids, with no oversight.
All cities make concessions to their major employers. Sometimes too many, sometimes too few. Encouraging their productive enterprises is not bad thing.
This company just needs a "fixer" cleaning up behind them like a out-of-control rock band at peak earnings and drug abuse. -
USAFRet techbro idiocy.Reply
It would have been trivially easy, possibly even cheaper, to mock up household furnishings in a warehouse, or even a storage area.
But no...AirBNB is where their headspace is, so lets use/abuse that. Who cares! -
ingtar33 Reply
Waymo is a robo-taxi.Co BIY said:All cities make concessions to their major employers.
explain who it's employing. -
USAFRet Reply
The techbros that run the company.ingtar33 said:Waymo is a robo-taxi.
explain who it's employing. -
Co BIY Replyingtar33 said:Waymo is a robo-taxi.
explain who it's employing.
They employ around 2,000, mostly in the bay area, with the corporate headquarters at Mountain View and an office in San Francisco. The spin offs of that are likely substantial with legal, accounting and consulting contractors. Those are all pretty good jobs even for California.
I have no particular love for Waymo or idestructiverobot.new ect... but tech innovation is the Bay Area's main productive enterprise and that should be understood even when not 100% appreciated. -
Notton Reply
I mean, if your interpretation of mowing down kids with cars and blocking emergency services from reaching their destination is "not a bad thing", then I don't know what to say to you.Co BIY said:All cities make concessions to their major employers. Sometimes too many, sometimes too few. Encouraging their productive enterprises is not bad thing.
This company just needs a "fixer" cleaning up behind them like a out-of-control rock band at peak earnings and drug abuse.
I guess, for starters, go look up what the "Social Contract" is, and why we once eliminated child labor in the western world. -
Findecanor The use of an apartment as testing grounds for a robot could also be a violation of the rules of the housing estate, in which case the host could be obligated to take legal action.Reply
Either way, the robots should have been made to have a much better level of accuracy before being unleashed onto a real home environment. Seriously, what amateurs.
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