LinkedIn censorship

AlexH

Administrator
Staff member
I usually use LinkedIn just to have an account and occasionally see what’s being posted. Honestly, I’ve always felt the platform is overrated – everything seems overly complicated, with a lot of hype for very little.

But that’s not what I want to talk about today.

A few days ago, I posted an article sharing my analysis: right now, Model Z AI is the most effective, and Chinese models are better, cheaper via API, and even free compared to American models.

What happened? 20 minutes later, my account was suspended for “violating the rules.”

Which rules, exactly? It was an informational article, nothing more.

Cases like this are becoming increasingly common. The clear takeaway: if you don’t conform to their narrative, you’re out.

I’m not whining about losing my account; I’m just noticing a trend that seems to be growing everywhere – LinkedIn or Reddit, nowadays, free expression seems conditional, and algorithms (or “bots”) will limit your visibility if you don’t follow the official line.

It’s a lesson about how platforms operate today: if you’re not compliant, you’re invisible.
 
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