Linkedin is ramping up its fight against waves of AI-generated content on the platform. New detection systems aim to throttle low-quality posts, while a verification filter should make bots and fake profiles easier to spot. The business world’s Facebook is tackling a growing problem: more and more posts and comments on the platform are apparently being cranked out by AI with zero real value. Linkedin uses the now common term “AI slop:” content that looks polished on the surface but says nothing. “When AI is overused, especially at scale and in an automated way, it dilutes the valuable insights that real human conversations can spark,” writes Laura Lorenzetti, Vice President and Executive Editor at Linkedin Global Editorial, in a blog post. AI as a writing aid is fine, she adds. But posts and comments need to sound like the person behind them. “Your posts and comments need to represent your voice and your perspectives,” Lorenzetti says. That this comes from Microsoft, of all companies, is pretty ironic. Linkedin’s algorithm—like every social media algorithm—already tends to reward gimmicky, overly personal posts over stuff with actual substance. But the irony cuts deeper. Microsoft itself has been actively pushing AI use on Linkedin.
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LinkedIn’s war on AI slop is not just a policy update—it is an admission that the platform lost …

LinkedIn’s war on AI slop is not just a policy update—it is an admission that the platform lost …