
Airbnb guest says images were altered in false £12,000 damage claim
The London-based academic was refunded almost £4,300, and an internal review of how the case was dealt with has been launched at the short-term accommodation rental company.
The incident highlights how cheap and easily available artificial intelligence software is now being used to manipulate images to give false evidence of what has happened in consumer complaints, according to one security expert.
The woman, who is based in London, had booked the one-bedroom apartment in New York's Manhattan for two-and-a-half months earlier this year to stay in while she was studying, but she decided to leave early after feeling unsafe in the area.
Shortly after she left, the host told Airbnb that she had caused more than £12,000 worth of damage, and submitted pictures of an apparently cracked coffee table as part of his case. His allegations included that she had stained a mattress with urine, and damaged a robot vacuum cleaner, a sofa, a microwave, a TV and an air conditioner.
The woman denied any damage had been done to the apartment. She said she left it in good condition and had only two visitors during the seven weeks she stayed. A close examination of two pictures of the coffee table appears to show differences in the damage, leading the woman to believe they were digitally manipulated or generated by AI. She says the host was retaliating because she ended her tenancy early.
Airbnb initially told her 'after careful review of the photos', she would have to reimburse the host a total of £5,314. She appealed against the decision.
'I informed them that I can provide testimony from an eyewitness who was with me during checkout and can attest under oath to the condition in which the property was left: clean, undamaged, and in good order,' she says. 'I also clearly demonstrated visual discrepancies in images of the same object (wooden table) provided by the host that show clear signs of fabrication.'
She adds: 'These inconsistencies are simply not possible in genuine, unedited photographs of the same object. This should have immediately raised red flags and discredited the host's claims if the evidence had been reviewed with even basic scrutiny, but Airbnb not only failed to identify this obvious manipulation, they entirely ignored my explanations and clear evidence that the material was fabricated.'
Five days after Guardian Money raised questions about the case with Airbnb, the woman was told it had accepted her appeal and credited her account with £500. When she then said she was not going to rebook with Airbnb again, the company offered an £854 refund – a fifth of the cost of her booking. She refused to accept this and was refunded the full cost (£4,269) of her booking, and a negative review that the host had placed on her profile was taken down.
'My concern is for future customers who may become victims of similar fraudulent claims and do not have the means to push back so much or give into paying out of fear of escalation,' the woman says.
'Given the ease with which such images can now be AI-generated and apparently accepted by Airbnb despite investigations, it should not be so easy for a host to get away with forging evidence in this way.'
The man who complained about her is listed as a 'superhost' on Airbnb, which the site says is someone who is experienced and highly rated. He did not respond to a request for comment.
Airbnb said he had been warned for violating its terms and told he would be removed if there was another similar report. The company told him that it could not verify the images he submitted as part of his complaint.
Airbnb apologised and said there would be a review into how her case was handled. 'We take damage claims seriously – our specialist team reviews all available evidence to reach proportionate outcomes for both parties, and to help ensure a fair approach, decisions can be appealed.'
Serpil Hall, the director of economic crime at the management consultants Baringa, said that manipulating images and videos was now 'easier than ever', and software to do so was cheap, widely available and required little skill to use.
In one recent case an insurance company found there had been an increase in false claims on vehicles and home repairs using photos that had been manipulated.
'Recently, many companies have decided images can't be taken at face value any more [during disputes], and there is a need for forensic tools and fraud intelligence models to validate them.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
TONY HETHERINGTON: What's the truth about this energy firm promising me 12% returns?
Tony Hetherington is Financial Mail on Sunday's ace investigator, fighting readers corners, revealing the truth that lies behind closed doors and winning victories for those who have been left out-of-pocket. Find out how to contact him below. R.B. writes: Some time ago I was contacted by TBE Consultants Ltd about investments in Terra Firma Energy Ltd. They said: 'Our clients enjoy a 12 per cent return on their capital inside 12 months.' I did not invest, but I have now seen a website called Stonehold Investment also promoting Terra Firma Energy. Are you able to find out anything about this company and the people who run it? Tony Hetherington replies: This investigation began in January, with more than a few twists and turns since then. Let's start with the sales firm TBE Consultants. Coincidentally, a few weeks after I began enquiring, its owner William Davies put it into liquidation with debts estimated at £1.7 million. According to the Financial Conduct Authority, Davies was once an investment adviser at Beaufort Securities, already a disreputable stockbroking company when he joined in 2005. The City watchdog fined it £90,000 in 2006. He also ran finance firm Salesian Consultants Ltd until he put this into liquidation in 2019. He borrowed more than £79,000 from it but convinced the liquidator to accept just £30,000 in settlement, saying he was close to bankruptcy. A few months later, Davies became a director of one of the Terra Firma Energy (TFE) group of companies and now sits on the board of four TFE businesses. So when TBE Consultants was recommending investment in TFE, Davies was a boss at both. The salesman who contacted you from TBE Consultants was Stephen Leary, whose background in dodgy investments is pretty scary. He is currently banned for 14 years from acting as a director of any limited company following his central role at Worldwide Commodity Partners Ltd, an investment scam which cost investors almost £3 million. That said, this does not stop him from working in his present role. According to the FCA, Leary was also at two separate disreputable stockbrokers, both exposed by The Mail on Sunday. And while a salesman at TBE Consultants he marketed loan bonds issued by Platinum Assets And Developments (PAD). I warned in 2020 that this was a high-risk scheme. It relied largely on the prospects of an offshoot, Platinum Energy Solutions, but last year the High Court ordered this into liquidation because of its debts. And here is a link to Terra Firma Energy. Peter Eagle was the managing director of the failed Platinum Energy Solutions, and he became a director of TFE in 2020 until quitting in 2021. The day-to-day management team at TFE are just as interesting. When I began investigating, its business development manager was Dan Keenan. In 2012 he was jailed for 11 years for money laundering and other financial crimes, linking him to a major drug dealer. And before this he was jailed for five years for blackmail and conspiracy to defraud. Mr Keenan vanished from TFE's website within hours of my first questions to the company. Simon Fagan was named as TFE's legal adviser. He is a Manchester solicitor, and in 2015 he was a director of radiator company Xefro Ltd, the parent company of Xefro Trade, which was wound up by the High Court following an investigation which described its products as defective and dangerous. Of course, none of this means TFE's 12 per cent loan notes will flop. The firm exists and runs 'battery farms' that store power with the idea of selling it on. It is concerning, though, that its website claims TFE is in partnership with National Grid, which told me: 'Terra Firma sell power to the electricity grid, or into the national energy market. They do not sell it to National Grid.' TFE did, however, say that their assets had participated in the electricity market. TFE's loan notes are only supposed to be offered to experienced or wealthy investors who can take risks. The website of Stonehold Investment – where you spotted the TFE investment – emphasises this. And it should know, as Stonehold Investment is just TFE itself using a different name! Stonehold has claimed to be 'award winners' and 'trusted by 123,000 investors'. What awards? And how many investors! Well, I asked TFE about Stonehold and about its personnel. TFE failed to reply, but back like a guided missile came a rocket fired at me by its lawyers. Stonehold's claims erroneously appeared in Google results, they conceded. TFE had no explanation but would correct this. Yes, William Davies was a stockbroker but was just one of many employees at firms penalised by the regulator. Nothing to do with TFE, they added. Yes, Stephen Leary is banned as a director for ripping off investors, but this does not ban him from recruiting investors now for TFE, they explained. Yes, Simon Fagan provides legal advice to TFE, but so what, as TFE has no connection to disgraced company Xefro. The lawyers insisted that TFE's management team had no idea of Dan Keenan's prison record and told me that he has now left the company by mutual agreement. If so, it might be a good idea to ask Mr Keenan to change his LinkedIn page, which still says he is TFE's full-time business development manager. It might also be a good idea for Helen Aletras, one of TFE's management team, to stop putting holiday photos online showing her with Mr Keenan, who she has known for many years. Mysteriously, investment in TFE's loan notes was promoted via a now-defunct website called This claimed that TFE has a '15-year purchase agreement with National Grid'. However, I am told now that TFE has no idea who ran the sales site, or why they promoted TFE as an investment. TFE's lawyers also told me there was no reason that any of this should be published. I disagree.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Is your new job a scam? How to spot the red flags and avoid losing £1,000s
SCAMMERS are preying on desperate job hunters struggling to find work as unemployment rockets to a four-year high. With figures showing the unemployment rate at 4.7 per cent, those scrambling for work have become prime targets for fraudsters. Criminals are posing as recruiters to trick victims into handing over money or personal financial information. Lloyds Bank has reported a 237 per cent rise in job scams this year, with victims losing £1,420 on average. Mark Sitton, from TPF Recruitment, says: 'The current economic climate and rising unemployment has created the perfect environment for fraudsters to thrive in and carry out job scams.' Blathnaid Corless explains what to look out for . . . HOW THEY GET YOU THERE are lots of different scams to watch out for. You may get an unexpected text, email, call, WhatsApp or message on social media from fake agents offering flexible roles. They come with pay cheques of up to £1,000 a day, says Mark. His company has seen a spike in con artists pretending to be recruiters from the firm. Mark says: 'They will lead the victim through a seemingly legitimate recruitment process, which may include video interviews, requests for references and even fake offer letters, all of which create the illusion of credibility.' To gain your trust, crooks may even pay you a small fee for accepting the job offer. 'However, the real intention is to extract sensitive personal and financial information,' says Mark. Be wary if you are asked for personal details, such as your full name, address, date of birth and copies of your passport or driver's licence, as well as your National Insurance number, which can all be used to commit identity fraud. They may ask for your bank details in order to process your pay, but in reality, they are doing everything they can to get their hands on your cash. Some fake job ads have dodgy links that take you to websites designed to steal your logins or put viruses on your computer, says HSBC head of fraud David Callington. Sophisticated scammers will also create fake websites to draw you into the con. Victims will be shown an 'earnings dashboard' and told to pay a fee to unlock higher-paying tasks, Mark adds. As victims complete more tasks, they will see their 'earnings' rise on the dashboard and will be more inclined to pay in more money to level up to higher-paid tasks — but of course, it is all fake. Similarly, you may be told to sign up for a certain type of crypto wallet, which the fraudsters will secretly have access to. You will be told your pay will be sent to the wallet but that you need to put money into it first before you can do the work tasks. Then the scammers swipe the money. Victims may be asked to pay the company for computers or other tech needed as part of the job. And beware of the 'overpayment trick', David warns. 'Scammers will send you a cheque that is more than your 'salary' and ask you to send the difference back. 'Then their cheque bounces, and you're out of pocket.' THE RED FLAGS THERE are warning signs to watch out for if you have been approached by a recruiter. David Callington says: 'If a job offer seems too good to be true, pays higher than expected for little effort, asks for money upfront, or demands too much personal information too soon, be very, very suspicious.' 3 A real recruiter would never ask you to pay them to secure a job, says Melissa Mhondoro, from the Recruitment and Employment Confederation, as this would be a breach of industry laws. A recruiter does not need to know your date of birth, financial information or your National Insurance details. You would never be asked for your bank details before you have signed a contract. Check any documents and contact details, such as the recruiter's email address, for poor spelling and grammar. Beware if the recruiter's email address contains @yahoo or @hotmail, or if you have been added to unknown apps or group chats where you will be spammed with job ads. Stick to applying for jobs directly on company websites or on well-known, trusted job boards such as LinkedIn, Indeed or Reed. If you think you have fallen for a fake job offer, you should stop talking to the 'agent' immediately. Take a note of their details and report it to Action Fraud (0300 123 2040, If you have handed over any money, tell your bank immediately. And scam-proof your phone by blocking unknown calls. BT INCREASES PRICE HIKE WATCH out for hefty mid-contract bill hikes if you are signing up for a new broad- band or mobile phone deal with BT, Plusnet or EE. BT, which owns the other two, has announced the three brands will increase their mid-contract price rises for broadband customers from £3 to £4 a month. This affects new customers signing up for contracts any time from now. BT and EE customers will see the hike hit their bills on March 31 next year and again on March 31, 2027. Plusnet will roll out the higher charges to new customers signing up from Tuesday. For mobile plans, any BT, EE and Plusnet customers on Sim-only and Flex Pay plans will see their contracts rise by £2.50 in April. Bundled handset and airtime plan customers will face a £4 rise, also in April. Uswitch telecoms expert Ernest Doku described the changes as 'another pounding for consumers' wallets'. He added: 'BT's price updates have often set a precedent for other providers to follow suit. 'If this trend continues, the telecoms industry runs the risk of creating its own accelerated rate of inflation.' BT said in a statement said: 'We're focused on providing value and customer satisfaction, making new technologies available to our customers such as 5G standalone and WiFi 7.' BLATHNAID CORLESS LOVE AFFECTS PREMIUMS YOUR relationship status could be pushing up your car insurance by hundreds of pounds but there are ways to slash costs. Single drivers pay the most, at an average of £859 a year, according to data from MoneySuperMarket. 3 But separated drivers are charged an average of £496 – £363 less. Marital status is a big factor insurers look at when assessing how risky you are. Single drivers are usually regarded as more risky to insure than married couples, who pay £799 on average for their annual premiums. Married couples have a reputation as financially stable and less accident-prone. Widowed motorists pay an average of £515, while those who are listed as a 'partner' pay £760. Making a simple tweak to your relationship status could save you hundreds of pounds – but don't lie, otherwise you could invalidate your insurance. For example, if you are no longer married, state 'divorced' instead of single, and save £349. Other ways to slash your premiums include parking in a garage instead of on the road. Pay annually, not monthly, otherwise you will be charged interest and pay more. If you don't have enough cash to pay upfront, consider using a zero per cent credit card, which charges no interest for a set period.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
TikTok Labubu trend exploited by criminals with dangerous fakes
At an anonymous industrial estate on the outskirts of London, a queue of police vans and empty lorries block the usual flow of lunchtime are here to seize fake Labubu dolls. Thousands of weeks of work, intelligence that started at a corner shop in south Wales has led Trading Standards officers to a labyrinth of rooms hidden above this retail they estimate millions of pounds worth of fake products are piled up, floor to ceiling, but what interests them most are the fluffy, mischievous-looking dolls at the centre of a global TikTok craze. According to Forbes, the popularity of Labubu dolls helped parent company Pop Mart more than double its total revenue to £1.33bn ($1.81bn) last are wanted by children and adults alike, with some telling us they queued for hours or travelled across the country just to secure an authentic one. However, messages seen by BBC News also suggest scalpers may be buying hundreds of genuine products at a time to resell them at a profit, with authorities reporting a "flood" of counterfeits entering the Force has seized hundreds of thousands from UK ports in the past few months, meanwhile officers at the London industrial estate believe the dolls grinning up at them from the crates hide a darker secret."The head comes off. The feet will pull off," explained Rhys Harries from Trading Standards, as one literally falls apart in his hands. Mr Harries first saw dolls like this after raiding a corner shop almost 200 miles away in Swansea, before tracing them back here."I've found them in the bags where their eyes are coming off, their hands will come off." Mr Harries' team use a plastic tube, shaped like a child's throat, to measure how dangerous objects are - if it fits, it is a choking hazard."These [parts] will all get stuck and then potentially cause choking," he said. Mum-of-one Jade said she "100%" agreed the fakes were a choking hazard after some fell apart shortly after giving them to her 34-year-old from Caerphilly knew she had bought fakes - sometimes nicknamed Lafufus - for her son Harri's sixth birthday as she could not justify the cost of the authentic she felt "obliged to get him one" after all his friends got their own and found knock-offs for just over £10, compared to some genuine ones costing £ just a few hours into Harri's birthday, Jade said the keyring came off, followed by part of one of the feet a few days Harri was swinging his new toy the hook came off the keyring, only for Jade to spot it in his said "luckily" her son was old enough to tell her about his toy falling apart, but she warned things could be different for younger children. According to the Intellectual Property Office, the rush by criminals to get fakes to market often results in dangerous materials being used."Counterfeiting is the second largest source of criminal income worldwide, second only to drug trafficking," said Kate Caffery, deputy director of intelligence and law enforcement."It's in the interests of these criminal organisations to respond quickly to trends to maximise it, to get on the back of it and make the most money that they possibly can."So that's why we see it happening so quickly and a complete disregard for safety concerns." Ms Caffery dismissed claims these fakes were made in the same factories or using the same materials as the real thing as "absolutely not true", adding that they "could be made from anything".These range from the inferior to the dangerous, including toxic plastics, chemicals, and small parts that aren't properly attached "that can then pose a chocking hazard".Although fake Labubus are still relatively new to the market, investigators know from previous cases involving counterfeit toys that they can be made with banned chemicals, including some linked to say most counterfeit products, including Labubus, can be traced to China, Hong Kong or Turkey and people are being warned to look out for "too good to be true" pricing or packaging that feels cheap and flimsy. TikToker Meg Goldberger, 27, is no stranger to collecting in a market filled with has about 250 Jellycat plush toys, alongside her new collection of 12 Labubu dolls."The more people talked about it and the harder they became to get, the more I needed them. That's why I now have 12," she pretty early into her search, Ms Goldberger said she realised the odds were stacked against her in her hunt for the real thing. She said she spent about 12 hours over several days waiting for Pop Mart store's TikTok live video, where Labubus are released for sale at a set time, just like gig tickets."It used to be they sold out within like a minute. It's now like literally two seconds. You can't get your hands on them," she she opted to find someone reselling them online, but also discovered why they may have been selling out so she asked an eBay reseller for proof the Big Into Energy Labubu series she was interested in was genuine, Ms Goldberger was sent "a screenshot of what could have been like almost 200 orders of Labubus". "These people will sit at home and somehow robots hack the websites and bulk buy them, which is why they go so quickly. Then they'll resell them." Mr Harries said a selection of fake Labubus would be taken from London back to Swansea for use as rest will be stored as evidence at a secret location before being either recycled or destroyed."These were going everywhere," he said."There were invoice books with them and they were going all across the UK. It's a national issue."Pop Mart has been asked to comment.