Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

TikTok now allows Apple Music subscribers to play entire songs without leaving the app

The pro-Iranian hacktivist group says it is behind the attack on medical technology giant Stryker

Ride-hailing inDrive acquires Pakistan’s Krave Mart to boost grocery delivery

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    AI ‘Actress’ Tilly Norwood Releases Worst Song I’ve Ever Heard

    12 March 2026

    AI apps struggle with long-term retention, according to a new report

    11 March 2026

    Amazon is launching its AI health assistant on its website and app

    11 March 2026

    Sandbar secures $23M Series A for AI note-taking ring

    10 March 2026

    OpenAI and Google employees are quick to defend Anthropic in the DOD lawsuit

    10 March 2026
  • Apps

    Google Play adds new paid and PC games, game tests, community posts and more

    12 March 2026

    Google brings Gemini to Chrome in India

    11 March 2026

    YouTube surpasses Disney, Paramount, WBD in ad revenue in 2025

    11 March 2026

    X says it will suspend creators from revenue sharing program for AI posts without ‘armed conflict’ tag

    10 March 2026

    Periwinkle makes it even easier to host social media on Bluesky’s AT Protocol

    10 March 2026
  • Crypto

    Hackers stole over $2.7 billion in crypto in 2025, data shows

    23 December 2025

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025

    Why Benchmark Made a Rare Crypto Bet on Trading App Fomo, with $17M Series A

    6 November 2025

    Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko is a big fan of agentic coding

    30 October 2025

    MoviePass opens Mogul fantasy league game to the public

    29 October 2025
  • Fintech

    India neobank Fi removes banking services on its platform

    11 March 2026

    X taps William Shatner to give invitations to his payment service, X Money

    4 March 2026

    Stripe wants to turn your AI costs into a profit center

    3 March 2026

    3 days left: Save up to $680 on your ticket to Disrupt 2026

    25 February 2026

    More startups surpass $10M ARR in 3 months than ever before

    24 February 2026
  • Hardware

    Canopii seems to succeed where the old indoor farms failed

    11 March 2026

    Hyperscale Power is the latest startup to challenge 140-year-old transformer technology

    10 March 2026

    Whoop is launching a new blood test focused on women’s health

    10 March 2026

    Honor says its ‘Robot phone’ with moving camera can dance to music

    8 March 2026

    Apple unveils M5 Pro and M5 Max chips with new ‘Fusion Architecture’

    8 March 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    TikTok now allows Apple Music subscribers to play entire songs without leaving the app

    12 March 2026

    WordPress debuts a private workspace that runs in your browser via a new service, my.WordPress.net

    11 March 2026

    “Pokémon Pokopia” is a game about restoring a broken world — and I love it

    11 March 2026

    YouTube extends fake AI detection to politicians, government officials and journalists

    10 March 2026

    Xprize Founder Peter Diamandis Launches New Contest To Announce New ‘Star Trek’

    10 March 2026
  • Security

    The pro-Iranian hacktivist group says it is behind the attack on medical technology giant Stryker

    12 March 2026

    Salt Typhoon hacks the world’s phone and internet giants — here’s where they’ve been hit

    11 March 2026

    DOGE employee stole Social Security data and thumbed it, report says

    11 March 2026

    US military contractor likely built iPhone hacking tools used by Russian spies in Ukraine

    10 March 2026

    An iPhone hacking toolkit used by Russian spies likely came from a US military contractor

    10 March 2026
  • Startups

    Ride-hailing inDrive acquires Pakistan’s Krave Mart to boost grocery delivery

    12 March 2026

    Google completes $32 billion acquisition of cloud cybersecurity startup Wiz

    11 March 2026

    Mandiant founder just raised $190 million for autonomous AI security agent startup

    11 March 2026

    AI networking startup Eridu emerges from stealth with hefty $200M Series A

    10 March 2026

    Bluesky CEO Jay Graber is stepping down

    10 March 2026
  • Transportation

    Nuro is testing its autonomous vehicle technology on the streets of Tokyo

    12 March 2026

    Zoox plans to put its robotaxis on the Uber app in Vegas this year

    11 March 2026

    GM figured out how to deal with EV uncertainty with the Chevy Bolt

    11 March 2026

    Electric air taxi maker Archer hits back at Joby alleging hidden Chinese ties

    10 March 2026

    Electric air taxis are set to fly in 26 states

    10 March 2026
  • Venture

    This SpaceX Veteran Says The Next Big Thing In Space Is Satellites Returning To Earth

    10 March 2026

    Founders Fund is approaching $6 billion for its latest growth fund, sources say

    10 March 2026

    Robinhood’s startup fund stumbles in its NYSE debut

    7 March 2026

    City Detect, which uses artificial intelligence to help cities stay safe and clean, raises $13M Series A

    7 March 2026

    Lio raises $30 million from Andreessen Horowitz and others to automate business procurement

    5 March 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»AI»Ok, so what’s up with the LinkedIn algo?
AI

Ok, so what’s up with the LinkedIn algo?

techtost.comBy techtost.com12 December 202508 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Ok, So What's Up With The Linkedin Algo?
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

One day in November, a product strategist we’ll call Michelle (not her real name), logged into her LinkedIn account and changed her gender to male. She also changed her name to Michael, she told TechCrunch.

He participated in an experiment called #WearthePants where women tested the assumption that LinkedIn’s new algorithm was biased against women.

For months, some heavy LinkedIn Users complained of seeing a drop in engagement and impressions on the career-oriented social network. This was after the company’s vice president of engineering, Tim Jurka, said in August that the platform had “more recently” implemented LLM to help display useful content to users.

Michelle (whose identity is known to TechCrunch) was suspicious of the changes because she has more than 10,000 followers and ghostwrites posts for her husband, who only has about 2,000. However, she and her husband tend to have the same number of post impressions, she said, despite her larger following.

“The only significant variable was gender,” he said.

Marilynn Joyner, founder, also changed the gender of her profile. She has been posting consistently on LinkedIn for two years and has noticed over the past few months that the visibility of her posts has decreased. “I changed the gender of my profile from female to male and my impressions increased by 238% in one day,” he told TechCrunch.

Megan Cornish reported similar results, as did Rosie Taylor, Jessica Doyle Mekkes, Abby Nydam, Felicity Menzies, Lucy Ferguson and so on.

Techcrunch event

San Francisco
|
13-15 October 2026

LinkedIn he said that “Algorithm and artificial intelligence systems do not use demographic information such as age, race or gender as a signal to determine the visibility of content, profile or posts in the feed” and that “a snapshot of your own feed updates that is not fully representative or equal does not automatically imply unfair treatment or bias in the feed.”

Social algorithm experts agree that overt sexism may not have been a cause, although implicit bias may be at work.

Platforms are “a complex arrangement of algorithms that pull specific mathematical and social levers, simultaneously and continuously.” Brandeis Marshalldata ethics consultant, told TechCrunch.

“Changing one’s profile picture and name is just one such driver,” he said, adding that the algorithm is also influenced by, for example, how a user currently has and interacts with other content.

“What we don’t know are all the other drivers that make this algorithm prioritize one person’s content over another. This is a more complex problem than people realize,” Marshall said.

Bro-coded

THE #WearthePants The experiment started with two entrepreneurs – Cindy Gallop and Jane Evans.

They asked two men to create and post the same content as them, curious to find out if gender was the reason so many women felt a dip in engagement. Gallop and Evans both they have a large following — more than 150,000 combined compared to the two men who had about 9,400 at the time.

Gallop reported that her post reached only 801 people, while the man who posted the exact same content reached 10,408 people, over 100% of his followers. Then other women joined. Some, like Joyner, who uses LinkedIn to promote her business, were concerned.

“I would love to see LinkedIn take responsibility for any bias that may exist in their algorithm,” Joyner said.

However, LinkedIn, like other LLM-dependent search and social media platforms, offers little detail on how to train content selection models.

Marshall said most of these platforms “inherently have embedded a white, male, Western-centric view” because of who trained the models. Researchers find elements of human biases such as sexism and racism in popular LLM models because models are trained on human-generated content and humans are often directly involved in post-training or reinforcement learning.

However, how an individual company implements its AI systems is shrouded in algorithmic black-box secrecy.

LinkedIn says the #WearthePants experiment could not have demonstrated gender bias against women. Jurka’s statement in August said — and LinkedIn’s Head of Responsible Artificial Intelligence and Governance, Sakshi Jain, he repeated in another post in November — that its systems do not use demographic information as a signal for visibility.

Instead, LinkedIn told TechCrunch that it tests millions of posts to connect users with opportunities. It said demographic data is only used for such tests as to see if posts “from different creators are competing on a level playing field and that the scrolling experience, what you see in the stream, is consistent across audiences,” the company told TechCrunch.

LinkedIn has been noted for research and adaptation its algorithm to try to provide a less biased experience for users.

It’s the unknown variables, Marshall said, that likely explain why some women saw increased impressions after changing their profile gender to male. Participating in a viral trend, for example, can lead to a boost in engagement. Some accounts were posting for the first time in a long time and the algorithm could have possibly rewarded them for that.

Tone and writing style can also play a role. Michelle, for example, said the week she posted as “Michael,” she adjusted her tone slightly, writing in a more simplistic, direct style, as she does for her husband. That’s when he said impressions were up 200% and engagements were up 27%.

She concluded that the system was not “overtly sexist” but appeared to consider communication styles commonly associated with women “a proxy for lower value”.

Stereotypical male Writing styles are believed to be more concisewhile the stereotypical writing styles for women they are imagined to be softer and more emotional. If an LLM is trained to reinforce writing that conforms to male stereotypes, this is a subtle, implicit bias. And as we mentioned earlier, researchers have found that most LLMs are full of them.

Sarah Dean, an assistant professor of computer science at Cornell, said platforms like LinkedIn often use entire profiles, in addition to user behavior, when determining content to boost. This includes tasks on a user’s profile and the type of content they typically interact with.

“One’s demographics can affect ‘both sides’ of the algorithm — what they see and who sees what they post,” Dean said.

LinkedIn told TechCrunch that its AI systems look at hundreds of signals to determine what to promote to a user, including information from a person’s profile, network and activity.

“We’re constantly testing to understand what helps people find the most relevant, timely content for their careers,” the spokesperson said. “Member behavior also shapes the feed, the changes users make, save and interact with daily, and what formats they like or dislike. This behavior also naturally shapes what appears in the feeds along with any updates from us.”

Chad Johnson, a LinkedIn sales professional, is described changes such as unfavorites, comments and reposts. The LLM system “no longer cares how often you post or what time of day,” Johnson wrote in a post. “He cares if your writing shows understanding, clarity, and value.”

All of this makes it difficult to determine the true cause of any #WearthePants results.

People just dislike algo

However, it seems that many people, across both genders, either don’t like or don’t understand LinkedIn’s new algorithm — whatever it is.

Shailvi Wakhulu, a data scientist, told TechCrunch that she averaged at least one post a day for five years and used to see thousands of impressions. Now she and her husband are lucky enough to see a few hundred. “It’s discouraging for content creators with large loyal followings,” he said.

One man told TechCrunch that he’s seen about a 50% drop in engagement in recent months. However, another man said he saw impression posts and reach increase more than 100% over a similar period of time. “That’s largely because I’m writing about specific topics for specific audiences, which the new algorithm rewards,” he told TechCrunch, adding that his clients are seeing a similar increase.

But in Marshall’s experience, she, who is Black, believes that posts about her experiences perform worse than posts related to her race. “If black women only have interactions when they’re talking about black women, but not when they’re talking about their particular expertise, then that’s a bias,” she said.

The researcher, Dean, believes the algorithm may simply be amplifying “whatever signals are already there.” It could reward certain posts, not because of the demographic of the author, but because there is more of a history of responding to them across the platform. While Marshall may have stumbled into another area of ​​implicit bias, her anecdotal evidence isn’t enough to determine it for sure.

LinkedIn offered some insight into what’s working well now. The company said its user base has grown and as a result, posts are up 15% year-over-year, while comments are up 24% year-over-year. “This means more competition in streaming,” the company said. Posts about professional knowledge and career lessons, industry news and analysis, and educational or informational content about work, business and the economy do well, he said.

If anything, people are just confused. “I want transparency,” Michelle said.

However, since content selection algorithms are always closely guarded by their companies and transparency can lead to their game, this is a big question. It is something that is unlikely to ever be satisfied.

algo algorithms LinkedIn llm PPC social media Whats
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleWith iOS 26.2, Apple lets you bring back Liquid Glass again — this time on the lock screen
Next Article Runware raises $50 million in Series A to make it easier for developers to create images and videos
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

AI ‘Actress’ Tilly Norwood Releases Worst Song I’ve Ever Heard

12 March 2026

AI apps struggle with long-term retention, according to a new report

11 March 2026

Amazon is launching its AI health assistant on its website and app

11 March 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

TikTok now allows Apple Music subscribers to play entire songs without leaving the app

12 March 2026

The pro-Iranian hacktivist group says it is behind the attack on medical technology giant Stryker

12 March 2026

Ride-hailing inDrive acquires Pakistan’s Krave Mart to boost grocery delivery

12 March 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

India neobank Fi removes banking services on its platform

11 March 2026

X taps William Shatner to give invitations to his payment service, X Money

4 March 2026

Stripe wants to turn your AI costs into a profit center

3 March 2026
Startups

Ride-hailing inDrive acquires Pakistan’s Krave Mart to boost grocery delivery

Google completes $32 billion acquisition of cloud cybersecurity startup Wiz

Mandiant founder just raised $190 million for autonomous AI security agent startup

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.