P2: 
Right, so I was first thinking you file a complaint, but you don't know what the effect of that complaint is. 
So you don't know whether it will go to, like, I don't know, I used to have an alcoholic neighbor. 
So maybe it will go to, like, a social system or to the Airbnb system. 
And then, yeah, I've been wanting to do this for a while, to be honest, to give people, like, a light hang out on the outside of their house to indicate whether it's a hotel room for a night. 
Like the New York hotel signs. 
And then maybe you could make an Airbnb one or a Booking one, just make it visible so that you know, like, there's a lot of noise there, and it's actually currently rented out. 
So I know where my complaint will go. 
I don't think it's a practical solution but I like it anyway. 
And then I think once the people come to check up on your house with the report, they should actually bring the report and it should indicate what the indicators were that made you suspicious. 
So it could be, like, a previous incident. 
Or maybe it's based on your neighborhood, or based on, yeah. 
So that's "legible". 
And then I got into this kind of path of thought that it's, this is all, it's all based on individual incidents. 
I think the effects of Airbnb are collective effects as well, so it changes in neighborhoods and not just noise levels… On one night. 
So for example, like there's less supermarkets and more bike rentals and this kind of systemic impact. 
But now it's just based on individual complaints and individual cases. 
But I don't really know where this gets filled in. 
But yeah, with this neighbor that I had, the city actually told me to file a lot of complaints so that it would get higher in the system. 
So just pick up the phone more often. 

R1: 
Wow. 

P2: 
Yeah. 
And I think there should be more indicators than just individual complaints. 
So then I was thinking, like, kind of relatability, like, I think we all know that certain neighborhoods are more vulnerable to illegal holiday rentals. 
And maybe it should also say, like, you're renting it out within a neighborhood where there's already too much. 
But I don't know what the relation is between individuals. 
I got a bit stuck there. 
And yeah, maybe it should take data not from the basisregistratie, but from like the Chamber of Commerce. 
How have the businesses developed in this neighborhood over the past few years or how should it, like more societal kind of statistics and less individual statistics. 
And then I got into the role of the company because… Are you okay? (To R2.) Because of the data sharing issue. 
Like maybe they could say, like we turn the AI around, like you said, and we could say, like, maybe don't rent out your house this weekend in that neighborhood because we already have so many in the neighborhood. 
Yeah, and then it was more about the personal matchmaking also because I think that's kind of the charm of holiday rentals. 
Yeah, and then maybe you can kind of forbid icons [inaudible]. 
Yeah, and then the last thing, one of you said you should be able to rent it out if it's your possession. 
And I sometimes have some trouble with that you have the right to earn money with your house or someone whereas someone who rents their house doesn't have that right. 
And maybe you can, I live in a pretty big VVE, 200 houses, kind of spread the profits from this somehow or return it into neighborhoods. 
So it was a lot of individual/collectiveness, which I couldn't really place in here except for the tools for scrutiny, but not really scrutiny, but positive. 

P3: 
So redistribute it. 

R1: 
Collectivizing things. 

P2: 
Yeah, yeah, yeah, and yeah, actually, this is, yeah, it has to do with the monitoring, I think. 
Yeah, okay, I think that's it.