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mgartin 1 hours ago [-]
I recently started to receive emails with:
"New skill available: Puzzle solving"
Begging me to compete with colleagues. Oh, what they have become...
I have unsubscribed from their emails now.
zeafoamrun 26 minutes ago [-]
When I see connections are wasting time playing LinkedIn puzzles I'm just embarrassed for them. Although I half expect it's just made up for engagement like fake profiles on dating sites.
onion2k 32 minutes ago [-]
I'm willing to bet that "Daily Active Users" is one of LinkedIn's H1 OKRs. Putting a daily game on the site earned an SVP a fat bonus.
karmakurtisaani 41 minutes ago [-]
"A [recruiter you connected with 3 years ago in hopes of getting job opportunities, but never heard from ever again] reacted to a post by [a person you've never heard of before]: What taking a long shit while my wife was screaming at my kids taught me about b2b sales.
Click here to read more"
psalaun 31 minutes ago [-]
Switching the feed setting from the default algorithmic curated one to chronological improves a lot. And unsubscribe people liking the kind of post you're mocking, too.
spenvo 1 hours ago [-]
Good luck actually unsubscribing from LinkedIn emails. The dark pattern they employ (or at least used to employ, for many many years) is to just periodically add new "categories" of email to send you, that you haven't yet unsubscribed from. Back in ~2015, out of frustration I changed my LinkedIn email to a throwaway
Zenul_Abidin 1 hours ago [-]
I unsubscribed from LinkedIn emails but they still send me emails of people I should connect with.
Now debating whether I should delete it altogether.
ozim 35 minutes ago [-]
Nothing that inbox rules can’t fix. I just pass all LinkedIn mails to dev/null on arrival.
atraac 1 hours ago [-]
While I also dislike LinkedIn a lot, I unsubscribed once in the past and I haven't received a single email like that in years.
nickdothutton 2 hours ago [-]
I really wish LinkedIn would collapse and close so that something useful could take its place. At the moment I feel like it's squatting the "business networking" square on the board, but I don't know what it would take to dislodge it. I wrote a little about this on my blog about a decade ago and I don't feel we are any closer to it being dislodged.
pugio 2 hours ago [-]
LinkedIn is one of the most annoying sites on the internet. Every time I mistakenly click a link, it automatically grabs my Google account and creates a new account and profile for me, which I then have to go in and delete. Yes, I finally figured out which arcane preferences settings across both LinkedIn and Google I had to tweak to stop this from happening, but I think it was only after ChatGPT was around to help me wade through the mess.
dlcarrier 1 hours ago [-]
If you use Chrome, or many of its derivatives, you can log into the web browser itself, and many people don't even know they are doing so. It can leak a lot of data, more so if you use the 'sign in with…' feature on many web pages. On a phone, if you're logged into the phone OS you're logged into the included web browser, and an aftermarket web browser may still leak information from your phone login.
I don't log my phone OS or web browser into any accounts, so I don't have to worry about LinkedIn making fake profile pages, but Cloudflare pretty much always assumes I'm a bot, so there's a bit of a downside. Honestly, I'm probably better off not visiting most of the web pages it blocks me from.
technion 39 minutes ago [-]
This isn't LinkedIn specific - the easily misclickable "one click to logon with Google" button showing up in browsers was a huge mistake and should never have existed. Reddit has started prompting too if you're not currently logged in, to just suddenly be logged in with Google.
realty_geek 55 minutes ago [-]
Sorry, I don't understand.
Somehow linkedin creates a new account (on linkedin? - so a brand new account?) without your agreement?
sixtyj 38 minutes ago [-]
LinkedIn was really good idea at the beginnings but as always what is for free you are a product.
After reading few LI posts full of “I am grateful” and “I am honored” or “Thank to my excellent team…” bla bla - you have to think that people in your circle became LI-infected as that jargon is not normal.
Nevertheless. There is an opportunity to start over with a new global professional network. LI concept still makes sense.
xhevahir 33 minutes ago [-]
That doesn't sound to me like a consequence of their free-as-in-beer business model. It sounds like an accurate reflection of business culture and the way people talk in that sort of milieu.
mawadev 1 hours ago [-]
Linkedin is a site where LLMs talk to each other
ivolimmen 50 minutes ago [-]
I left the site over a month ago, I closed my account. I only receive weird emails from recruiters from it.
baranul 24 minutes ago [-]
And often, the person doesn't need nor are looking for a job, so can just get spammed. Where if you are actually looking, you can email your personal list of recruiters, of companies and persons you actually know or were recommended by real life friends.
ta8903 1 hours ago [-]
It works fine as a containment site.
steve1977 44 minutes ago [-]
I sometimes check if someone is active on LinkedIn or not (as in, actually posting stuff). This is useful as a filter.
ajb 31 minutes ago [-]
A positive one, or a negative one?
steve1977 17 minutes ago [-]
If they do post, I adjust my expectations, let me put it this way...
Surac 53 minutes ago [-]
Posts on linked in are 99% scam ans 1% finding out all is scam
ggm 25 minutes ago [-]
Surely the headline should be LinkedIn humbled to be a cesspool of...
d3Xt3r 3 hours ago [-]
I mean, LinkedIn themselves were pretty shady before the Microsoft acquisition - multiple privacy violations, email spam, even had a class action lawsuit against them. Microsoft never cared.
And anyone who set up a LinkedIn account knowing all this don't care either. I look at people who're still on LinkedIn the same way as people who're still on Facebook. They don't have my sympathies.
smackeyacky 2 hours ago [-]
My account is only there so nobody is tempted to squat there on my behalf. Perhaps a minor issue overall but worth considering
lbpdev 2 hours ago [-]
Fair, I guess. So what's a safe site for candidates to find jobs? Indeed isn't much better.
d3Xt3r 8 minutes ago [-]
Depends on where you live. Here in AU/NZ for example, Seek is pretty good, and I daresay just as good, if not better, in terms of job listings. And it doesn't have any of the social networking crap.
If there isn't a decent equivalent in your area, I'd say the next best option is to reach out to a bunch of recruitment agencies and leave your CV with them. Also create your own personal blog/site where you have your bio, examples of your work, and regular meaningful blog updates relavent to your field (which will improve search engine ranking and increase chances of companies reaching out to you).
But I reckon the best option generally is IRL networking, considering the current AI era - where recruiters are being spammed with AI-generated CVs, and they in turn are using AI to filter out CVs, so now there are specific AI tools to make the perfect CV matching a job description - but now everyone is using these tools, which makes it a nightmare for recruiters. So IMO the best option these days would be to make IRL connections.
gehsty 46 minutes ago [-]
I find AI has destroyed it, even the posts by people should know better post fully ai written posts (Major renewable CEOs posting AI slop is very sad).
I block the feed and just use for messages and notifications. LinkedIn is a platform that I’ve had multiple job opportunities come through, shame to see it go into slop meltdown.
"New skill available: Puzzle solving"
Begging me to compete with colleagues. Oh, what they have become...
I have unsubscribed from their emails now.
Click here to read more"
Now debating whether I should delete it altogether.
I don't log my phone OS or web browser into any accounts, so I don't have to worry about LinkedIn making fake profile pages, but Cloudflare pretty much always assumes I'm a bot, so there's a bit of a downside. Honestly, I'm probably better off not visiting most of the web pages it blocks me from.
Somehow linkedin creates a new account (on linkedin? - so a brand new account?) without your agreement?
After reading few LI posts full of “I am grateful” and “I am honored” or “Thank to my excellent team…” bla bla - you have to think that people in your circle became LI-infected as that jargon is not normal.
Nevertheless. There is an opportunity to start over with a new global professional network. LI concept still makes sense.
And anyone who set up a LinkedIn account knowing all this don't care either. I look at people who're still on LinkedIn the same way as people who're still on Facebook. They don't have my sympathies.
If there isn't a decent equivalent in your area, I'd say the next best option is to reach out to a bunch of recruitment agencies and leave your CV with them. Also create your own personal blog/site where you have your bio, examples of your work, and regular meaningful blog updates relavent to your field (which will improve search engine ranking and increase chances of companies reaching out to you).
But I reckon the best option generally is IRL networking, considering the current AI era - where recruiters are being spammed with AI-generated CVs, and they in turn are using AI to filter out CVs, so now there are specific AI tools to make the perfect CV matching a job description - but now everyone is using these tools, which makes it a nightmare for recruiters. So IMO the best option these days would be to make IRL connections.
I block the feed and just use for messages and notifications. LinkedIn is a platform that I’ve had multiple job opportunities come through, shame to see it go into slop meltdown.