LinkedIn is set to expand its use of user profile data to train artificial intelligence (AI) models, raising privacy concerns for millions of users worldwide. Fortunately, there are steps users can ...
You might have used LinkedIn to hunt for a new job, or keep in touch with colleagues from the early days of your career. But ...
For many workers, LinkedIn is a great source for job hunting, networking, and endless ‘inspirational’ posts to like but never actually read (you know the ones). Now it seems that LinkedIn is following ...
Artificial intelligence (AI) models are only as good as the data that train them, and if you use LinkedIn, your data is a part of that training. Fortunately, there's a way out. LinkedIn said today ...
LinkedIn uses your personal data and content that you create on LinkedIn to train generative AI models. You can opt out of the LinkedIn AI training by disabling the ...
As an objective journalistic observer of the tech and business world, I’d like to state the inarguable, quantifiable, unavoidable fact that LinkedIn sucks. It sucks really hard. LinkedIn is a terrible ...
LinkedIn may have trained AI models on user data without updating its terms. LinkedIn users in the U.S. — but not the EU, EEA, or Switzerland, likely due to those regions’ data privacy rules — have an ...
You’ll need to opt out twice to stop LinkedIn from using your account data for training in the future — but anything already done is done. You’ll need to opt out twice to stop LinkedIn from using your ...
A lawsuit in California accuses LinkedIn of using private messages on its platform to train AI models, according to the BBC. The lawsuit alleges that in August 2024, the Microsoft-owned social network ...
In late 2024, LinkedIn started using member profiles to train its AI. At the time, this was restricted to only certain areas, such as the U.S. and other countries. One year later, LinkedIn is now ...