By
Gigabit Systems
November 25, 2025
•
20 min read

LinkedIn Quietly Enabled AI Training — Here’s What You Must Disable Now
LinkedIn is rolling out a new setting that allows the platform to use your posts, interactions, and profile data to train its AI models. Most users won’t notice it. Most won’t change it. And that’s exactly how privacy erosion happens.
But here’s the good news:
You can turn it off in less than 30 seconds.
For SMBs, law firms, healthcare organizations, and schools, this matters. Professional networks hold sensitive data — client anecdotes, hiring plans, internal milestones, even compliance-related discussions. If employees leave this setting on, your organization’s footprint becomes AI training material.
Why This Matters for Cybersecurity
1. Corporate exposure grows silently
Employee activity on LinkedIn can inadvertently reveal:
Vendor relationships
Contract details
Leadership changes
Security stack hints
Investigations or litigation cues
AI models trained on that data make patterns easier to detect — including patterns attackers exploit.
2. Regulated industries face higher stakes
Healthcare staff, attorneys, educators, and financial professionals discuss work online more than they realize.
If that content is ingested into an AI model, even in aggregate, it can create:
HIPAA exposure
FERPA risks
Confidentiality breaches
Compliance failures
A single overlooked setting can create institutional liability.
3. Social engineering becomes stronger
Attackers can generate hyper-accurate impersonations when training data includes your phrasing, your work details, your network, your behavior patterns.
Turning off AI training reduces that footprint.
How to Turn Off LinkedIn’s AI Training Setting
Follow these steps:
Tap your profile avatar (top right).
Select Settings & Privacy.
Open Data Privacy.
Find Data for Generative AI Improvement.
Toggle it OFF.
That’s it — you’ve stopped LinkedIn from using your content to fuel its AI models.
Roll this change out to your teams. Add it to onboarding. Add it to offboarding. Add it to quarterly privacy reviews.
Privacy isn’t automatic. It’s configured.
The platforms won’t protect you by default — they protect themselves.
Your organization’s security depends on closing the quiet gaps before attackers exploit them.
70% of all cyber attacks target small businesses, I can help protect yours.
#cybersecurity #MSP #managedIT #dataprotection #SMBsecurity