It’s just a matter of time before we find greener pastures. Every so often, look at your spam folder, because sometimes legitimate messages end up there. Let’s just hope LinkedIn figures out how to block these messages and cleans up their messaging system. My ex is definitely signing me up for all types of spam including porn. The scammers are not the brightest bulbs, but they do tend to stick to the techniques that produce the best results. Next, go to the spam folder, and see what lands there and click not spam for. Tip: If you blocked someone by mistake, you can unblock them using the same steps. It’s obvious to me that the scams must work on LinkedIn, because they have become far more frequent. When you block a sender, their messages will go to your Spam folder. Email addresses repeatedly - and recently - reported for unwanted activity are highlighted and assigned with a score. They need to radically improve their algorithm, as opposed to providing the tools and paid options that allow scammers to send even more of these bogus messages. Spam Me Not quickly checks a list of email addresses for suspicious activity based on scoring provided by the crowdsourced API. The solution, of course, is for LinkedIn itself to crack down on these annoying messages and to stop incentivizing them so often. We’ve been conditioned to respond to chat messages on social media platforms, but I’m starting to “uncondition” myself. The messages also stick out on LinkedIn because there isn’t really a filter (as far as I know). LinkedIn literally makes money when people spam me. I suspect this is all related to LinkedIn catching on with scammers and spammers, those who have realized how spamming by email doesn’t work. Wait for your urgent reply Hey Dont miss this opportunity, oh yeah yeah yeah, oh yeah yeah yeah.
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