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> I think a better example would be You (AirBnB Host) rent a house to Person and Person loses the house key.

This is not a direct analogue, a closer analogy would be when the guest creates a copy of the key (why?) without my direct consent (signing a 2138 page "user agreement" doesn't count) and at some later point when I am no longer renting to them, loses the key.



I'm still much more interested in the answer to who is liable for the robbery.

Just the Robber? Or are any of the key-copiers (instead of losers w/e) also?


I don't really care about the answer to that specific question, where there's only one household.

What I will say is the guy that has copies of 20000 people's keys should get in trouble if he loses his horde.




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