Airbnb has reacted angrily to a restriction placed on it by authorities in the Dutch city of Amsterdam.
Officials banned rentals in three of the city's central districts last week, beginning on July 1.
The company has found itself on the end of criticism in recent years that turning private accommodation over to tourists has squeezed renting and forced away local residents.
Amsterdam's council has stated its intention to crack down on mass tourism in the UNESCO-protected inner quarters.
It claims one in 15 properties in the whole city are available on online booking sites such as Airbnb.
The three districts in question have around 1,500 private accommodation rental properties for tourists - around 6% of the amount available in the entire city.
Still, Airbnb says it is "deeply concerned the proposals are illegal and violate the basic rights of local residents" to rent out their properties to tourists.
There are around 18,000 hotel beds in the same three areas of the city.
Amsterdam was one of the first major tourist cities in Europe to forge an agreement for Airbnb to collect tourist taxes from property owners.
Local hotels had previously complained that some hosts were not collecting the standard tourist tax from guests, in the same way that hotels, hostels and B&Bs did with their own customers.
Airbnb claims its guests in 2019 collectively spent €400 million in the city, including €8 million on the tourist tax.
Seven out of ten guests stayed at a property out of the center of Amsterdam, it says.