Post by ester22 on Mar 27, 2024 10:30:50 GMT
Clicking before thinking is never a good idea and we all fell for it. It doesn’t take much stretch of the imagination to wonder how a cybercriminal could use our identities and steal them to commit a crime. If I had to do it again, I’m not sure I would. Especially as it is not certain that this functionality will be maintained given the extreme volatility of LinkedIn’s features overtime. However, if the platform decided to link the ability to add contacts to one’s network with this certification (to avoid fake accounts), this would change the overall picture. Nevertheless, one should be able to choose one’s provider and switch to Gov.UK or France connect + or whatever tool promoted by one’s country’s government.
Have We Become Slaves to AI? Another Australia Email List feature discussed with Bruno was the ability to reply to collaborative or supposedly collaborative articles. Bruno was very critical of this feature. The questions posed by LinkedIn, which are pushed to users in order to make them believe they could be granted a hypothetical “expert” badge and status, are in fact produced with generative AI. Bruno even pointed out that some of these questions sometimes missed the point, and especially the rules for using the service.
Asking, for example, “How do you ‘scrape’ data from LinkedIn?” This expert status, while relative, is only temporary, Bruno explains. In short, it’s best to avoid wasting your time. This exercise involves providing content to the platform free of charge and becoming a slave to the social platform, for the benefit of an algorithm. It’s likely that no one will read your publications, which even you will find hard to recover. (Bruno provided a tip to explain how to recover them by logging out, but it was a trifle complicated…) If I don’t recover the content, I produce so that it is at least visible on my profile, what’s the purpose? At the end of the day, if a subject uncovered in a collaborative article appeals to you, take up the question and deal with it in a post on your profile independently of the “collaborative” article.
Have We Become Slaves to AI? Another Australia Email List feature discussed with Bruno was the ability to reply to collaborative or supposedly collaborative articles. Bruno was very critical of this feature. The questions posed by LinkedIn, which are pushed to users in order to make them believe they could be granted a hypothetical “expert” badge and status, are in fact produced with generative AI. Bruno even pointed out that some of these questions sometimes missed the point, and especially the rules for using the service.
Asking, for example, “How do you ‘scrape’ data from LinkedIn?” This expert status, while relative, is only temporary, Bruno explains. In short, it’s best to avoid wasting your time. This exercise involves providing content to the platform free of charge and becoming a slave to the social platform, for the benefit of an algorithm. It’s likely that no one will read your publications, which even you will find hard to recover. (Bruno provided a tip to explain how to recover them by logging out, but it was a trifle complicated…) If I don’t recover the content, I produce so that it is at least visible on my profile, what’s the purpose? At the end of the day, if a subject uncovered in a collaborative article appeals to you, take up the question and deal with it in a post on your profile independently of the “collaborative” article.