top | item 9938318

(no title)

dm2 | 10 years ago

Some sites just give off a vibe that prevents me from ever trusting them, LinkedIn is the most predominant in that category and I have never been able to put my finger on exactly why. The email proxy apps and the pay to see who viewed your profile aspects don't help.

I'm not saying that it's any worse than any other sites, but LinkedIn has always felt like a shady company, like they're not on the users side.

I was really hoping that the Google+ reboot would fulfill the niche market that LinkedIn dominates, but it did not.

discuss

order

yankoff|10 years ago

The "best" feature they have is automatically sending notifications to all your peers (and through email) when you change one little thing in your profile. And they show specifically what you edited. You can disable it of course in settings, but you have to know about that. I've seen enough awkward situations come out of this. How is it even possible that they think it is okay?

gknoy|10 years ago

I can see the rationalization: I've added React and Javascript to my LinkedIn profile, so it's probably nice to publish that to recruiters that I'm connected with, or friends who can endorse them.

Of course, I really don't want to spam them while I am rewriting prose about jobs until it's done, though, so it'd have been nicer if the spamming didn't happen until I pushed some kind of "publish" button.

roflchoppa|10 years ago

its because they tell the user that you clicked their profile. what kind of bullshit is that, I wanna compare myself to other people without them knowing.

maximuscoolimus|10 years ago

Try using the Incognito Mode in Chrome.

Of course, that will only give you a public view of a profile, but it seems to hide your identity nonetheless.