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LinkedIn will suspend your account if they detect AI-generated…

LinkedIn will suspend your account if they detect AI-generated content. They restrict API access so aggressively that programmatic posting is nearly impossible. They've made it very clear where they stand on AI. And then they roll out AI tools to help executives write posts. I genuinely find this funny. They're trying to win both sides of the same argument simultaneously, and that's not a position you can hold for long. You can't police AI content with one hand and sell AI content creation tools with the other. Pick a lane. But here's the thing, the LinkedIn hypocrisy is actually the less interesting part of this story. The real issue is what these tools are solving for. LinkedIn's pitch is that executives are too busy to post, so their meeting notes and memos can now be auto-converted into carousels and updates. Tone slider. Risk sensitivity dial. Done. That's not the problem. The bottleneck for most executives isn't formatting. It's that they don't have a genuinely distinct perspective worth reading. And if you feed a generic thought into an AI polishing machine, you get a very well-formatted generic thought. More volume, less signal. AI content is not going away. It's already here. Anyone waiting for a world where people just stop using it is going to wait forever. The question is never "AI or no AI." The question is whether there's a real human perspective at the source of what gets made. That's why I think voice notes are how this actually works well. You speak your thoughts. Unfiltered, unpolished, yours. The AI can do the formatting work, the restructuring, the multi-platform distribution. But the ideas come from a person who actually had them. That distinction matters enormously, and it's the only version of AI-assisted content that doesn't collapse into noise. The tools LinkedIn built skip that step entirely. They start with a document, not a voice. And documents have usually already had the rough edges sanded off before anyone touches them. More executive posts. Fewer executives actually saying anything.

Mark HadfieldJun 17, 2026Published to Linkedin - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

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