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"plaintext": "There is a version of you that lives on LinkedIn's servers. It has your job history, your endorsements, your carefully written summary, and fifteen years of professional relationships. You built it. You tended it. You pointed employers, clients, and collaborators at it."
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"plaintext": "You have a licence to use it. That licence can be revoked. The platform can change the rules, throttle your reach, lock you out, or simply decide one day that your account violates a policy you didn't know existed. And when that happens, the professional identity you spent years assembling disappears behind a login screen you no longer control."
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"plaintext": "This isn't a hypothetical. It happens regularly. And most professionals treat it the same way they treat the possibility of a house fire: possible in the abstract, not worth thinking about until it isn't."
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"plaintext": "The Architecture of Dependency"
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"plaintext": "LinkedIn is not a tool you use. It is a landlord you pay with data."
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"plaintext": "Every time you update a position, add a skill, or post an article, you are improving someone else's asset. The connections you make are stored in their database, not yours. The endorsements you receive are rows in their tables. When you \"export your data,\" you get a static CSV file, a snapshot in time, stripped of structure and context. You cannot take your professional graph anywhere meaningful. The relationships stay behind, locked in a proprietary system."
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"plaintext": "This is what digital feudalism looks like in professional clothing. You get the appearance of a home. They keep the deed."
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"plaintext": "The Three Failure Modes Nobody Talks About"
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"plaintext": "Identity Death. A single moderation decision, an algorithm flag, or a mass reporting campaign and your account is gone. With it goes your connection list, your endorsements, your activity history, your network-specific credibility. There is no appeal process that moves at a speed that matters professionally. By the time you are reinstated, if you are reinstated, the moment has passed."
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"plaintext": "Data Hostage. You cannot move your professional record to another platform in any useful form. If a better tool emerges, or if LinkedIn's incentives diverge from yours (and they will), you are stuck. Portability is a marketing term, not a technical guarantee. Your data travels as a flat file into a void."
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"plaintext": "Compliance Fiction. For Canadian and European professionals, US-centralized platforms create a quiet legal problem. Your data lives in jurisdictions with laws that do not protect you the way your own country's might. PIPEDA and GDPR are promises made about data stored on foreign soil, enforced by foreign companies, under the watchful eye of foreign regulators who have other priorities."
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"plaintext": "There Is Another Way"
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"plaintext": "The AT Protocol changes the underlying architecture."
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"plaintext": "Instead of a platform storing your profile, you own a Personal Data Server. Your professional record, your connections, your content, everything lives there as JSON records signed to your Decentralized Identifier (DID). Your identity is cryptographic, not institutional. No company can revoke it. No terms of service update can erase it."
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"plaintext": "Kevara is built on this foundation. We are a display layer, not a database. When you build your profile here, you are not uploading your data to us. You are reading your own records and rendering them in a professional presentation layer. If Kevara disappeared tomorrow, your data would still be on your PDS, readable by any other app in the AT Protocol ecosystem."
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"plaintext": "The resume stays. The landlord leaves."
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"plaintext": "The AT Protocol is no longer an experiment. Networks like Bluesky, Gander, and EuroSky are growing, and they are building the infrastructure that makes sovereign professional identity practical, not just philosophical."
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"plaintext": "For Canadian professionals especially, Gander represents something specific: a Canadian-operated social network built on open standards, with data residency that actually means something, governed by the realities of Canadian law."
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"plaintext": "The moment to establish your sovereign professional presence is not when something goes wrong on a centralized platform. It is before that. It is now, when you have the time to build it right, port your history, and start accumulating trust in a system that is designed to give it back to you."
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"plaintext": "Your LinkedIn profile doesn't belong to you."
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"textContent": "---\nThere is a version of you that lives on LinkedIn's servers. It has your job history, your endorsements, your carefully written summary, and fifteen years of professional relationships. You built it. You tended it. You pointed employers, clients, and collaborators at it.\nBut you don't own it.\nYou have a licence to use it. That licence can be revoked. The platform can change the rules, throttle your reach, lock you out, or simply decide one day that your account violates a policy you didn't know existed. And when that happens, the professional identity you spent years assembling disappears behind a login screen you no longer control.\nThis isn't a hypothetical. It happens regularly. And most professionals treat it the same way they treat the possibility of a house fire: possible in the abstract, not worth thinking about until it isn't.\nThe Architecture of Dependency\nLinkedIn is not a tool you use. It is a landlord you pay with data.\nEvery time you update a position, add a skill, or post an article, you are improving someone else's asset. The connections you make are stored in their database, not yours. The endorsements you receive are rows in their tables. When you \"export your data,\" you get a static CSV file, a snapshot in time, stripped of structure and context. You cannot take your professional graph anywhere meaningful. The relationships stay behind, locked in a proprietary system.\nThis is what digital feudalism looks like in professional clothing. You get the appearance of a home. They keep the deed.\nThe Three Failure Modes Nobody Talks About\nIdentity Death. A single moderation decision, an algorithm flag, or a mass reporting campaign and your account is gone. With it goes your connection list, your endorsements, your activity history, your network-specific credibility. There is no appeal process that moves at a speed that matters professionally. By the time you are reinstated, if you are reinstated, the moment has passed.\nData Hostage. You cannot move your professional record to another platform in any useful form. If a better tool emerges, or if LinkedIn's incentives diverge from yours (and they will), you are stuck. Portability is a marketing term, not a technical guarantee. Your data travels as a flat file into a void.\nCompliance Fiction. For Canadian and European professionals, US-centralized platforms create a quiet legal problem. Your data lives in jurisdictions with laws that do not protect you the way your own country's might. PIPEDA and GDPR are promises made about data stored on foreign soil, enforced by foreign companies, under the watchful eye of foreign regulators who have other priorities.\nThere Is Another Way\nThe AT Protocol changes the underlying architecture.\nInstead of a platform storing your profile, you own a Personal Data Server. Your professional record, your connections, your content, everything lives there as JSON records signed to your Decentralized Identifier (DID). Your identity is cryptographic, not institutional. No company can revoke it. No terms of service update can erase it.\nKevara is built on this foundation. We are a display layer, not a database. When you build your profile here, you are not uploading your data to us. You are reading your own records and rendering them in a professional presentation layer. If Kevara disappeared tomorrow, your data would still be on your PDS, readable by any other app in the AT Protocol ecosystem.\nThe resume stays. The landlord leaves.\nWhy This Matters Right Now\nThe AT Protocol is no longer an experiment. Networks like Bluesky, Gander, and EuroSky are growing, and they are building the infrastructure that makes sovereign professional identity practical, not just philosophical.\nFor Canadian professionals especially, Gander represents something specific: a Canadian-operated social network built on open standards, with data residency that actually means something, governed by the realities of Canadian law.\nThe moment to establish your sovereign professional presence is not when something goes wrong on a centralized platform. It is before that. It is now, when you have the time to build it right, port your history, and start accumulating trust in a system that is designed to give it back to you.\n\n\n---\nYour LinkedIn profile doesn't belong to you.\nYour Kevara profile does.\nKevara is a sovereign professional hub built on the AT Protocol. Your data lives on your PDS, your credentials are cryptographically signed, and your professional identity travels with you across every network in the open social web.",
"title": "Your LinkedIn Profile Doesn't Belong to You"
}