Microsoft's LinkedIn CEO, Ryan Roslansky, took on an expanded role at the company as head of Office last year, and he's now getting more responsibilities as part of the latest leadership reshuffle inside Microsoft. Sources tell me that the Microsoft Teams organization is moving to report to Roslansky, who will now lead a new Work Experiences Group at Microsoft.
The changes are part of a broader reshuffle triggered by Rajesh Jha, executive vice president of Microsoft's experiences and devices group, retiring from Microsoft after more than 35 years. Jha was responsible for the teams behind Windows, Office, Copilot, and Microsoft 365, and Micr …
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The LinkedIn cofounder now has an AI drug discovery startup—and thinks not asking chatbots for medical advice is “bordering on committing malpractice.”
LinkedIn is testing a new AI feature, Crosscheck, which allows users to compare several popular AI models directly on the platform. Users enter prompts into Crosscheck and receive two different responses generated by competing AI models from companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google.
After the user selects the best response, the model behind each answer is revealed. LinkedIn product manager Hari Srinivasan describes the service as a kind of blind taste test for AI models, according to Engadget.
Crosscheck works only with text, but has no limits on the number of questions. At the same time, LinkedIn shares anonymized user data with the AI companies to provide insights into how the models perform across different professional groups.
The feature is initially available to LinkedIn Premium subscribers in the US, with plans to expand to more countries and free users soon.
The networking platform – social media’s answer to boomer grandparents – is rapidly becoming an AI slop dystopia. Which made it the perfect place for my Nvidia-inspired fairytale
When electronic musician Grimes – AKA Claire Boucher – took to X last year to claim she was “only gonna be releasing music on LinkedIn from now on”, it seemed like yet another provocation from an often eccentric artist. But the ex-partner of Elon Musk may have followed through on her promise. Last month, a profile purporting to be the 38-year-old appeared on the world’s least gratifying social networking platform. Its only post so far promotes an appearance at Nvidia’s GPU Technology Conference – Nvidia being the most valuable company in the world and the engine behind just about all AI applications.
Pivoting to LinkedIn might seem a depressing thing for an artist to resort to: a bit like moving in with your boomer grandparents. And it is. I should know because, in one of the more counterintuitive brags I’ve m
LinkedIn has reported a roughly 20% decline in hiring since 2022, according to Blake Lawit, Chief Global Affairs and Legal Officer, speaking at the Semafor World Economy Summit. Drawing on LinkedIn’s large-scale labour market data, Lawit indicated that the downturn does not currently appear to be driven by artificial intelligence. Instead, he pointed to macroeconomic […]
Microsoft’s Windows Recall feature remains vulnerable to complete data extraction despite a major security overhaul, according to a cybersecurity researcher who says malware running in a user’s context can quietly siphon off everything Recall has captured, without administrator privileges, kernel exploits, or breaking encryption.
Alexander Hagenah, executive director at Zürich-based financial infrastructure operator SIX Group, made the claim in a LinkedIn post, where he also published a proof-of-concept tool called TotalRecall Reloaded to demonstrate the issue.
Hagenah first exposed Recall’s security flaws in 2024, forcing Microsoft to pull the feature from preview and rebuild it. Microsoft relaunched Recall in April 2025, saying the new architecture would restrict “attempts by latent malware trying to ‘ride along’ with a user authentication to steal data.” Hagenah said it does not.
“When you use Recall normally, TotalRecall Reloaded silently holds the door open behind you and then ext