LinkedIn is rolling out new measures to reduce low effort AI generated posts, automated comments, and fake AI profiles across the platform. The company says the changes target “AI slop,” meaning content that may sound polished but is generic, repetitive, or lacks a clear personal perspective. Users can still use AI to refine their writing, but LinkedIn says posts and comments should reflect their own views and experience. To enforce this, LinkedIn has built detection systems with its editorial team to identify generic AI generated content, including posts, comments published at scale through automation tools, and replies that only restate the original post without adding anything new. Content flagged this way will be less likely to spread beyond the author’s immediate network. LinkedIn says early tests correctly identified generic content 94% of the time. The company says members should see fewer generic posts from outside their networks as the system improves. LinkedIn is also expandi...
Related
Google's Gemini 3.5 Live Translate enables real-time multilingual speech in 70+ languages
Google has released Gemini 3.5 Live Translate, its latest audio model aimed at supporting live speech-to-speech translation. The model automatically detects more than 70 languages ...
Anthropic launches Claude Fable 5, a “safe” Mythos-class model with safeguards attached
Anthropic has released Claude Fable 5, a Mythos-class artificial intelligence model, now available for general use worldwide. Users accessing Fable 5 benefit from its expanded capa...
tvOS 27 adds redesigned Podcasts app, faster AirPlay, accessibility option
Apple’s tvOS 27 update features a redesigned Podcasts app and smoother app launches. The update offers faster AirPlay connectivity with other Apple devices and introduces a Larger ...