
"And now, LinkedIn's VP of Product Management Gyanda Sachdeva has shared a new update on its evolving spam focus. As per Sachdeva: We're gonna' take some action against automated comments. These are comments that are posted to LinkedIn through a third party auto-script or a browser plugin without any human oversight or review. Usually, when they are posted like this and are low quality, they end up flooding the comment section and degrade the overall experience."
"Sachdeva says that, now, when LinkedIn detects automated comments, it will remove them from the Most Relevant section of the post comments, which is the initial listing that users see in the app. Users can tap on this to switch to Most Recent instead, but the primary default display for comments is Most Relevant, which will mean that these types of automated"
LinkedIn will remove automated comments posted via third-party auto-scripts and browser plugins from the Most Relevant comments view to reduce low-quality comment flooding. Automated comments often originate from engagement pods and coordinated third-party tools that boost posts artificially and push genuine updates down users' feeds. Users can still view all comments by switching to Most Recent, but the default Most Relevant view will de-emphasize detected automated activity. These measures aim to limit fake engagement, improve feed relevance, and preserve comment quality by reducing visibility of non-genuine responses.
Read at www.socialmediatoday.com
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