Plaintiff appeals as of right, and defendants cross appeal, the trial court’s summary judgment entered for defendants with respect to plaintiff’s premises liability claim. We affirm.
i
Shortly before 1:00 a.m. on Saturday, December 12, 1987, plaintiff drove into the parking lot of defendant cooperative to visit a friend. After leaving her car, she was confronted by a man with a gun. He took her back to her car and then robbed and brutally raped her.
Plaintiff brought this action against the cooperative and its management agent, claiming that they *146had breached a duty owed her to keep the common areas of the cooperative reasonably safe. In response to defendants’ motion for summary disposition brought pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), the trial court ruled that defendants owed plaintiff no duty that had been breached, and dismissed plaintiff’s claim.
Plaintiff argues on appeal that defendants had a duty to take reasonable steps to protect her from the foreseeable criminal attacks of third parties in the parking lot.
ii
As a preliminary matter, we must decide whether prior judicial decisions discussing the duty owed in the landlord/tenant context are applicable in this case. Because a landlord exercises exclusive control over the common areas of the premises, the landlord is the only one who can take the necessary precautions to ensure that the common areas are safe for those who use them. Similarly, a cooperative association has exclusive control over the common areas of the cooperative, and the association is the only one that can act to make the common areas safe. We are satisfied that with regard to premises liability, the duty a cooperative association owes those who come on the premises is the same as the duty a landlord owes those who come on its premises.
hi
The duty a possessor of land owes to those who come upon the land turns on the status of the visitor. Thone v Nicholson, 84 Mich App 538, 544; 269 NW2d 665 (1978). The law has developed a three-tiered approach to defining the duties owed. *147Courts speak of the differing duties owed to "invitees,” "licensees,” and "trespassers,” but these labels are somewhat confusing. Invitees are entitled to be present on the land because of a license extended to them, and so are actually just a special class of licensees. See Powers v Harlow, 53 Mich 507, 514; 19 NW 257 (1884). Some people actually invited onto the land are not considered invitees, but mere licensees. See Preston v Sleziak, 383 Mich 442; 175 NW2d 759 (1970). In determining duty, it is not critical whether a licensee has actually been invited onto the land. The distinguishing characteristic that fixes the duty depends upon whether the licensee’s visit is related to the pecuniary interests of the possessor of the land. See id. at 449-450.
In this case, plaintiff was an invitee. Because her use of the parking lot was related to the pecuniary interests of the defendants, the possessors of the land on which she was attacked, it is irrelevant whether she visited the property as her friend’s social guest or as a business invitee. See Petraszewsky v Keeth (On Remand), 201 Mich App 535; 506 NW2d 890 (1993).
The landlord grants to tenants rights of exclusive possession to designated portions of the property, but the landlord retains exclusive possession of the common areas. The landlord grants to tenants a license to use the common areas of the property. Tenants pay for this license as part of their rent. Therefore, tenants are invitees of the landlord while in the common areas, because the landlord has received a pecuniary benefit for licensing their presence.
A landlord generally grants to the tenants the right to invite others to use the common areas of the property in order that they might gain access to the property under the tenants’ control. Be*148cause the tenants do not receive any pecuniary benefit from the visits of their social guests, those invited as social guests of the tenants are licensees for the purpose of defining the duty their hosts owe them. See Preston, supra. However, the landlord does receive some pecuniary benefit. Part of the rent paid to the landlord is the consideration for giving to the tenants the right to invite others onto the property. Thus, the same duty that a landlord owes to its tenants also is owed to their guests, because both are the landlord’s invitees. See Aisner v Lafayette Towers, 129 Mich App 642; 341 NW2d 852 (1983).
The cooperative is in sole possession of the common areas of the property, and association members have paid the cooperative for the right of their invited guests to utilize the common areas while visiting their residences. Consequently, whether plaintiff was visiting the cooperative on business as she contends, or was merely a social guest of an association member, she was an invitee with respect to the duty defendants owed her.
IV
Courts have said that landlords have a duty to protect their invitees from the foreseeable criminal acts of third parties in the common areas of the landlord’s premises. See Aisner, supra. The parties dispute the effect our Supreme Court’s decision in Williams v Cunningham Drug Stores, Inc, 429 Mich 495; 418 NW2d 381 (1988), had on this duty.
Williams did not change the basic duty a possessor of land owes its invitees. A landlord/cooperative must still exercise reasonable care to protect invitees from known or discoverable unreasonably dangerous conditions on the land that the invitees *149will not discover or from which they reasonably will fail to protect themselves. Riddle v McLouth Steel Products Corp, 440 Mich 85, 93-94; 485 NW2d 676 (1992). The Court in Williams held only that the duty a possessor of land owes its invitees does not require that merchants hire security guards to protect customers from the criminal acts of third parties. Williams, supra at 504.
Williams did not alter the duty that landlords owe their tenants and invitees. Specifically, the Williams Court did not abrogate the landlord’s duty to use reasonable care to protect tenants and their guests from foreseeable criminal activities in common areas inside the structures they control. The Court was careful to distinguish the case before it from landlord/tenant cases. Id. at 502, n 17. The duty to protect tenants from the criminal acts of third parties is not separate and independent from the duty a possessor of land has to protect its invitees. Rather, it is an expression of that basic duty in a precise context.
A landlord has a duty to act because he possesses exclusive control over the common areas of the property. The duty is owed to tenants and their guests because they are the landlord’s invitees. The duty to protect those persons from the criminal acts of third parties exists because criminal acts can be the foreseeable result of an unreasonably dangerous condition on the land. Landlords should anticipate that unsecured buildings provide opportunities for criminals to prey on victims away from the eyes and ears of police and witnesses, and the potential danger lurking in the interior of a building is not open and obvious to an unsuspecting invitee. Tenants and their guests rely upon responsible landlords to exercise reasonable care to protect them from foreseeable criminal activities in the common areas inside the *150premises, and when those in control fail to exercise reasonable care to provide for the safety of invitees, a dangerous condition is created on the premises that presents an unreasonable risk of harm. Thus, landlords have a duty to take reasonable precautions, such as installing locks on doors and providing adequate vestibule lighting, and may be liable in tort if they fail to do so. See Johnston v Harris, 387 Mich 569; 198 NW2d 409 (1972); see also Bryant v Brannen, 180 Mich App 87, 97-98; 446 NW2d 847 (1989).
However, the duty that a possessor of land owes his invitees is not absolute. He is not an insurer of the safety of an invitee. His duty is only to exercise reasonable care for their protection. Consequently, the landlord’s duty "does not extend to conditions from which an unreasonable risk cannot be anticipated or to dangers so obvious and apparent that an invitee may be expected to discover them himself.” Williams, supra at 500. The duty exists only when the landlord created a dangerous condition that enhances the likelihood of exposure to criminal assaults. See Johnston, supra at 573.
The danger of falling victim to criminality in an open parking lot located outside a building is not a dangerous condition created by the possessor of the property, but is a dangerous condition inherent in the society in which we live. The risk of being criminally assaulted in the middle of the night in a poorly lit, unfenced parking lot in the Detroit Metropolitan area is real and certainly can be anticipated. However, that risk is as obvious and apparent to an invitee as it is to the landowner. In short, the danger to which invitees are exposed in a parking lot is the same danger to *151which they are exposed in the community at large. The landlord has done nothing to create a condition conducive to criminal assaults.
In Williams, the Court decided that a merchant had no duty to its customers to make its premises safer than the surrounding community. Williams, supra at 502. We find that a landlord does not owe a duty to invitees to make open parking lots safer than the adjacent public streets. If a landlord or its predecessor has created a condition on the land presenting an unusual risk of criminal attack, the landlord has a duty to take reasonable measures to protect its invitees. This duty is limited and does not extend to providing security guards or to maintaining a boundary fence, because we do not require the possessor of land to anticipate and protect against the general hazard of crime in the community. Harkins v Northwest Activities Center, Inc, 434 Mich 896; 453 NW2d 677 (1990).
We find that, under these circumstances, defendants had no duty to protect plaintiff and, thus, are not liable for failing to do so.
Affirmed.
Michael J. Kelly, J., concurred.