The Prague Post - Women don fake mustaches in LinkedIn 'gender bias' fight

EUR -
AED 4.295879
AFN 73.680993
ALL 95.61613
AMD 434.868332
ANG 2.093333
AOA 1073.633328
ARS 1628.83577
AUD 1.63659
AWG 2.106626
AZN 1.983809
BAM 1.958178
BBD 2.355771
BDT 143.514305
BGN 1.950904
BHD 0.441685
BIF 3467.672629
BMD 1.169535
BND 1.493914
BOB 8.082852
BRL 5.841242
BSD 1.169626
BTN 109.986054
BWP 15.809201
BYN 3.302611
BYR 22922.894953
BZD 2.352467
CAD 1.601451
CDF 2705.135631
CHF 0.918354
CLF 0.026566
CLP 1045.553205
CNY 7.983838
CNH 7.991395
COP 4172.446391
CRC 532.549083
CUC 1.169535
CUP 30.99269
CVE 110.579489
CZK 24.354756
DJF 207.849989
DKK 7.472875
DOP 69.774214
DZD 155.164607
EGP 61.532883
ERN 17.543032
ETB 182.633398
FJD 2.593915
FKP 0.866079
GBP 0.86752
GEL 3.146162
GGP 0.866079
GHS 12.969867
GIP 0.866079
GMD 85.963856
GNF 10262.673688
GTQ 8.94186
GYD 244.729328
HKD 9.160796
HNL 31.08175
HRK 7.53812
HTG 153.2261
HUF 365.772141
IDR 20227.057248
ILS 3.492707
IMP 0.866079
INR 109.987501
IQD 1532.091448
IRR 1541506.208697
ISK 143.782282
JEP 0.866079
JMD 184.644259
JOD 0.829179
JPY 186.560203
KES 151.215099
KGS 102.235296
KHR 4689.836786
KMF 493.543873
KPW 1052.523457
KRW 1732.80129
KWD 0.36003
KYD 0.974784
KZT 543.372275
LAK 25647.912307
LBP 104731.900522
LKR 370.960549
LRD 215.516149
LSL 19.472746
LTL 3.453335
LVL 0.707441
LYD 7.424017
MAD 10.84387
MDL 20.293648
MGA 4855.918505
MKD 61.775756
MMK 2455.744973
MNT 4185.880793
MOP 9.436702
MRU 46.704725
MUR 54.663674
MVR 18.068987
MWK 2028.180664
MXN 20.338574
MYR 4.63545
MZN 74.735591
NAD 19.472648
NGN 1581.332007
NIO 43.042277
NOK 10.91231
NPR 175.976732
NZD 1.992614
OMR 0.449699
PAB 1.169626
PEN 4.029894
PGK 5.077166
PHP 70.810669
PKR 326.071429
PLN 4.24163
PYG 7405.994935
QAR 4.263879
RON 5.091109
RSD 117.35148
RUB 88.730962
RWF 1709.576362
SAR 4.386729
SBD 9.412884
SCR 16.23837
SDG 702.310592
SEK 10.807198
SGD 1.493322
SHP 0.873176
SLE 28.829039
SLL 24524.569277
SOS 668.411818
SRD 43.739469
STD 24207.022673
STN 24.529898
SVC 10.23443
SYP 129.388562
SZL 19.37353
THB 37.920437
TJS 10.994801
TMT 4.099222
TND 3.410943
TOP 2.815961
TRY 52.534832
TTD 7.929665
TWD 36.936288
TZS 3040.792433
UAH 51.381906
UGX 4351.284844
USD 1.169535
UYU 46.25618
UZS 14083.104605
VES 564.574208
VND 30790.359971
VUV 138.043165
WST 3.187451
XAF 656.75466
XAG 0.015419
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.160728
XCG 2.108069
XDR 0.8147
XOF 654.352556
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.080357
ZAR 19.365515
ZMK 10527.22464
ZMW 21.901694
ZWL 376.58994
  • CMSC

    0.0800

    22.91

    +0.35%

  • RBGPF

    -4.0600

    64.94

    -6.25%

  • RYCEF

    0.4400

    15.54

    +2.83%

  • BCC

    1.5800

    83.82

    +1.88%

  • RIO

    -1.4300

    98.85

    -1.45%

  • NGG

    1.3600

    86.96

    +1.56%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    24.1

    +1.54%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    55.63

    -0.13%

  • BTI

    1.1100

    57.28

    +1.94%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    23.23

    +0.43%

  • JRI

    -0.1200

    12.88

    -0.93%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    36.13

    -0.39%

  • VOD

    0.3100

    15.62

    +1.98%

  • AZN

    -2.5100

    192.3

    -1.31%

  • BP

    -0.0200

    46.35

    -0.04%

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.Havel--TPP