Berliner Boersenzeitung - Women don fake mustaches in LinkedIn 'gender bias' fight

EUR -
AED 4.281302
AFN 77.377829
ALL 96.632267
AMD 445.44874
ANG 2.0868
AOA 1069.015378
ARS 1685.695129
AUD 1.759925
AWG 2.099851
AZN 1.983056
BAM 1.956445
BBD 2.353286
BDT 142.957122
BGN 1.956513
BHD 0.43942
BIF 3452.156358
BMD 1.165774
BND 1.513151
BOB 8.073661
BRL 6.191194
BSD 1.16839
BTN 104.957046
BWP 15.52305
BYN 3.382529
BYR 22849.175596
BZD 2.349885
CAD 1.626214
CDF 2599.676669
CHF 0.936136
CLF 0.027272
CLP 1069.866164
CNY 8.243948
CNH 8.238934
COP 4426.433227
CRC 572.886379
CUC 1.165774
CUP 30.893018
CVE 110.301358
CZK 24.206095
DJF 208.069477
DKK 7.469209
DOP 74.244154
DZD 151.62759
EGP 55.39934
ERN 17.486614
ETB 182.187672
FJD 2.635786
FKP 0.874477
GBP 0.873633
GEL 3.142168
GGP 0.874477
GHS 13.309387
GIP 0.874477
GMD 85.101585
GNF 10152.738474
GTQ 8.949989
GYD 244.450576
HKD 9.075162
HNL 30.764009
HRK 7.534281
HTG 153.045699
HUF 382.909629
IDR 19411.890175
ILS 3.771909
IMP 0.874477
INR 104.795649
IQD 1530.611088
IRR 49108.24087
ISK 149.009374
JEP 0.874477
JMD 187.250919
JOD 0.826502
JPY 180.263491
KES 150.792515
KGS 101.946434
KHR 4679.683025
KMF 491.956642
KPW 1049.188513
KRW 1714.049422
KWD 0.357671
KYD 0.973725
KZT 590.567197
LAK 25346.463469
LBP 104631.537644
LKR 360.660429
LRD 206.228862
LSL 19.834223
LTL 3.442228
LVL 0.705165
LYD 6.351121
MAD 10.780554
MDL 19.874636
MGA 5196.690656
MKD 61.660325
MMK 2448.012739
MNT 4139.412917
MOP 9.367728
MRU 46.294061
MUR 53.7069
MVR 17.964199
MWK 2026.059144
MXN 21.235919
MYR 4.796021
MZN 74.495405
NAD 19.834223
NGN 1690.664166
NIO 42.995648
NOK 11.770491
NPR 167.929633
NZD 2.020316
OMR 0.448241
PAB 1.168485
PEN 3.929195
PGK 4.955782
PHP 68.771391
PKR 330.077317
PLN 4.234207
PYG 8102.705584
QAR 4.270608
RON 5.092451
RSD 117.406333
RUB 88.599264
RWF 1700.053084
SAR 4.375161
SBD 9.587122
SCR 17.349603
SDG 701.215258
SEK 10.974675
SGD 1.509565
SHP 0.874633
SLE 26.813195
SLL 24445.701283
SOS 666.616873
SRD 45.0496
STD 24129.173599
STN 24.509025
SVC 10.223414
SYP 12889.842916
SZL 19.828451
THB 37.180625
TJS 10.737785
TMT 4.08021
TND 3.429645
TOP 2.806905
TRY 49.565119
TTD 7.921645
TWD 36.49748
TZS 2856.146794
UAH 49.264627
UGX 4142.365416
USD 1.165774
UYU 45.775285
UZS 13918.587876
VES 289.795046
VND 30735.6385
VUV 142.35723
WST 3.264542
XAF 656.170474
XAG 0.02003
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.150564
XCG 2.105803
XDR 0.816065
XOF 656.176105
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.927368
ZAR 19.772651
ZMK 10493.370026
ZMW 26.843964
ZWL 375.378838
  • RIO

    -0.5500

    73.73

    -0.75%

  • BCE

    0.0400

    23.22

    +0.17%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.32

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    -2.3000

    74.26

    -3.1%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    23.48

    +0.17%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    16.23

    -0.74%

  • GSK

    -0.4000

    48.57

    -0.82%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.75

    +0.36%

  • BTI

    0.5300

    58.04

    +0.91%

  • NGG

    -0.5800

    75.91

    -0.76%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    78.35

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.4600

    14.67

    +3.14%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    37.23

    -0.03%

  • RELX

    0.3500

    40.54

    +0.86%

  • AZN

    -0.8200

    90.03

    -0.91%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    12.64

    +0.4%

Women don fake mustaches in LinkedIn 'gender bias' fight
Women don fake mustaches in LinkedIn 'gender bias' fight / Photo: JUSTIN SULLIVAN - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

Women don fake mustaches in LinkedIn 'gender bias' fight

Flipping their gender setting to "male" and even posting photos with fake mustaches, a growing number of women on LinkedIn have posed a provocative challenge to what they allege is an algorithmic bias on the platform.

Text size:

Last month, female users began claiming that adopting a male identity had dramatically boosted their visibility on the professional networking site, setting off a chain reaction.

Women adopted male aliases -- Simone became Simon -- swapped their pronouns for he/him, and even deployed AI to rewrite old posts with testosterone-laden jargon to cultivate what they describe as an attention-grabbing alpha persona.

To add a dash of humor, some women uploaded profile photos of themselves sporting stick-on mustaches.

The result?

Many women said their reach and engagement on LinkedIn soared, with once-quiet comment sections suddenly buzzing with activity.

"I changed my pronouns and accidentally broke my own LinkedIn engagement records," wrote London-based entrepreneur and investor Jo Dalton, adding that the change boosted her reach by 244 percent.

"So here I am, in a stick-on moustache, purely in the interest of science to see if I can trick the algorithm into thinking I am a man."

- 'Gendered discrepancies' -

When a female AFP reporter changed her settings to male, LinkedIn's analytics data showed the reach of multiple posts spiked compared to a week earlier.

The posts cumulatively garnered thousands more impressions compared to the previous week.

Malin Frithiofsson, chief executive of the Sweden-based Daya Ventures, said the LinkedIn experiment reflected "gendered discrepancies" that professional women have felt for years.

"We're at a point where women are changing their LinkedIn gender to male, swapping their names and profile photos, even asking AI to rewrite their bios as 'if a man wrote them,'" Frithiofsson said.

"And their reach skyrockets."

LinkedIn rejected accusations of in-built sexism.

"Our algorithms do not use gender as a ranking signal, and changing gender on your profile does not affect how your content appears in search or feed," a LinkedIn spokesperson told AFP.

However, women who saw their engagement spike are now calling for greater transparency about how the algorithm -- largely opaque, like those of other platforms -- works to elevate some profiles and posts while downgrading others.

- 'More successful' -

"I don't believe there's a line of code in LinkedIn's tech stack that says 'if female < promote less,'" Frithiofsson wrote in a post on the site.

"Do I believe gendered bias can emerge through data inputs, reinforcement loops, and cultural norms around what a 'professional voice' sounds like? Yes. Absolutely."

LinkedIn's Sakshi Jain said in a blog post that the site's AI systems and algorithms consider "hundreds of signals" -- including a user's network or activity -- to determine the visibility of posts.

Rising volumes of content have also created more "competition" for attention, she added.

That explanation met with some skepticism on the networking site, where more visibility could mean enhanced career opportunities or income.

Rosie Taylor, a Britain-based journalist, said the boost her profile got "from being a 'man' for just one week" saw unique visitors to her newsletter jump by 161 percent compared to the previous week.

That led to an 86 percent spike in new weekly subscriptions via LinkedIn.

"Who knows how much more successful I might have been if the algorithm had thought I was a man from the start?" Taylor said.

burs-ac/msp/iv

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)