Artificial intelligence has made deepfakes even easier to create, and with social media being bombarded with misinformation, LinkedIn is taking a different approach to verification, per CNBC.
“You now see things like deep-fake videos, photos that are increasingly harder with the naked eye to understand if they’re real or fake,” Oscar Rodriguez, LinkedIn’s vice president of trust and safety, told the outlet. “That line-blurring is what we believe poses a significant challenge in combating things like misinformation, faking expertise, and so forth.”
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LinkedIn has struggled with scammers posing at recruiters for years and has been working on its verification efforts for some time, per Axios.
The company began its verification service in April 2023 and announced this week that it has verified more than 55 million users so far. That’s more than any other social media platform, the company told CNBC.
However, unlike X and Meta, LinkedIn is verifying users for free. And it isn’t cheap. Rodriguez said the company has spent “a sizable investment” on the process.
Users can be verified through their company email addresses at select larger businesses. If your company is not participating, users can get verified with a government-issued ID through verification partners Clear and Persona, with LinkedIn footing the bill.
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LinkedIn’s goal is to have 100 million users verified in 2025.
Microsoft bought LinkedIn in 2016 for $26.2 billion.