Culture LinkedIn Issues Warning to Site Shaming Pro-Palestinian Sentiment - Over the last 10 days, a website called anti-israel-employees.com published more than 17,000 posts, which one of the people behind the site said had been taken mainly from LinkedIn.

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
LinkedIn Issues Warning to Site Shaming Pro-Palestinian Sentiment
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Ryan Mac
2023-10-23 09:23:00GMT

Online posts asking to “#PrayForPalestine.” Entreaties for peace. Pleas to “Free Gaza.”

Over the last 10 days, a website called anti-israel-employees.com published more than 17,000 posts, which one of the people behind the site said had been taken mainly from LinkedIn. The site, which claimed to be a “global live feed of potentially supportive sentiments for terrorism among company employees,” listed thousands of people and grouped them by their workplaces, in an apparent attempt to shame them for their sentiments on the Israeli-Hamas conflict.

The website, which was taken offline for a day before being migrated to a new web address, named employees of major international corporations, including Amazon, Mastercard and Ernst & Young, and shared their profile photos, LinkedIn pages and posts.

Itai Liptz, a hedge fund manager who said he was one of the people behind the original site, said that its goal was to “expose people who supported Hamas publicly.”

“We wanted to have it documented and a record,” he said. “If I work in this company, but I see my friends on LinkedIn celebrating and praising Hamas, then I’m not feeling safe.”

But the site also highlighted posts from people who did not explicitly show support for Hamas, according to posts seen by The New York Times. Some people used hash tags like “#GazaUnderAttack” or sought to draw attention to the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip. The site asked users to submit posts that they believed should be exposed, and included a numeric “hate score” for companies.

The site, which was created 10 days ago, comes amid a wider debate over online expression during a fraught international conflict. Similar lists have also been created to track college students who have spoken out in support of Palestinians, while Meta, the parent company of Instagram and Facebook, said it took down nearly 800,000 pieces of Hebrew and Arabic language content for violating its rules in the three days after the Hamas attacks on Oct. 7.

Some people who were highlighted on the site have already deleted their LinkedIn posts or their LinkedIn profiles. Mr. Liptz, who said he did not expect the site to become as popular as it did after spreading via WhatsApp groups, called the far-ranging capture of all pro-Palestinian sentiment a mistake.

“If somebody says ‘Free Palestine’ that is totally OK, and we shouldn’t put it on our website,” he said on Saturday. “We just want to make sure the filters are there because they have the right to say that.”

The site, however, was back online on Sunday at a new web address and still displayed the posts and names of people that Mr. Liptz had said would be removed. Now located at an Israel-specific domain, the site is being overseen by Guy Ophir, a lawyer in Israel, who said the team moved it to a new address after receiving a cease-and-desist letter from LinkedIn.

A spokesman for LinkedIn said the company determined that the site had used automated programs to extract content from the platform, a practice known as scraping, which is a violation of its rules. Mr. Liptz denied that his site extracted the LinkedIn information through scraping, while Mr. Ophir said he believed that LinkedIn was trying to infringe on his right to free speech.

“We are not going to remove the website,” he said. “We are willing to fight them here.”

The site has been a subject of discussion at Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, and LinkedIn, where employees have expressed concern about the chilling effect it could have on online speech.

“People are scraping pro-Palestine LinkedIn posts and adding them to a database of ‘terror supporters,’” one employee wrote last Wednesday in a note on an internal Meta message board that was seen by The Times.

Other Meta employees were in disbelief that expressing support for Palestine was equated with supporting terrorism.

“The lack of understanding,” a Meta employee wrote, “is beyond insensitive and cruel.”

---

The site has changed domains to: https://anti-israel-employee.co.il (archive.ph)
 
Last edited:
Love how this war revealed how companies actually feel about current events with DEI ideology.

1698088848972.png

Nobody forced them to take a stand with Ukraine or BLM.
 
This stuff has made more normal people start wondering. If they say ‘hey don’t bomb Palestinian kids’ they will lose their job and if they say ‘hey don’t shoot up civilians’ their local Muslims will have a word.
It’s really making people I see around me wake up.
 
Cope seethe and cry about the dystopian future you pushed for. People warned them that the machine would turn against them but they laughed because they were on the 'right side of history'. Pure schadenfreude injected straight my veins.
 
And this shit is supposed to make people pro-Israel... how?
Because they said so.

Morally, the only option would be to be against whoever started killing civilians and triggered said conflict. Realistically, the companies should had stuck with remaining neutral to avoid alienating their consumers/customers.
 
Regardless of what side you're on, I think we can all agree LinkedIn users deserve the gas.
 
I love seeing the Left tear itself apart.

It's even more fun because it was the Left that trained the plebs to always side with the "minority".

So now we have the Jews, who lets just say have significant input into what the MSM says, and the lefties who have been trained to automatically side with the little guy and these sides are for the first time diametrically opposed. So the drones who have been trained by the MSM are now opposing the MSM and causing all sorts of internal strife within the Leftist ecosystem.

And I'm loving it.
 
Regardless of what side you're on, I think we can all agree LinkedIn users deserve the gas.
I hate it when LinkedIn and its users inject politics into the platform. I'm not even talking about utilitarian causes , just plain virtue signalling when it is meant to facilitate job opportunity.
 
Turning against the creator intensifies.
angrygolem.gif


I hate it when LinkedIn and its users inject politics into the platform. I'm not even talking about utilitarian causes , just plain virtue signalling when it is meant to facilitate job opportunity.
They told people to "take your whole self to work" and LinkedIn is completely shit up with pronouns, BLM and pride flags. "Everything is political." Now they're reaping their rewards.
 
And this shit is supposed to make people pro-Israel... how?
Reverse psychology and controlled opposition tactics.I think Devon Stack (Black Pilled) has one of the best stances on this.


And I quote:

"Conservative babysitters like Ben Shapiro etc point out that BLM and Gretta don't support Israel with the expectation that you will fly into a rage and support Israel to "own" them because their audience really is that retarded. It's like reverse psychology working on a toddler."
 
lmao mastercard, pwc, and amazon employees are listed on there.

great way to get fired by spouting your political opinions on a website you shouldn't be using to 'socialize' on in the first place.
 
I've been reliably informed that documenting publicly posted sentiments and sharing them over the internet is the acts of evil Nazi sites like the notorious #i#i#a#m#.

Won't someone step in and threaten Cloudflare to remove their protections so the sites can be illegally DDOS'd by heroic friends of Hamas!
 
This stuff has made more normal people start wondering. If they say ‘hey don’t bomb Palestinian kids’ they will lose their job and if they say ‘hey don’t shoot up civilians’ their local Muslims will have a word.
It’s really making people I see around me wake up.
Completely agree. I'm seeing noticings occur in social spaces that I never thought of as political. Some of the best Tekken players are from Pakistan, and their top player recently posted a tweet in support of Palestine. I expected the response to it to be a whole bunch of hand-wringing but the actual response was more or less "yeah fuck Israeli settlers".
 
You have to be pretty retarded to post ideological bullshit on linkedin. Maybe im just out of touch though. I dont post anything on linkedin. I keep my opinions outside of things that can be easily tied to my identity.
 
Guys I honestly do not know what I hate more, Kvetchers or Sandniggers, although I'm starting to lean towards hating Kikes more as they are in control of our civilization as a whole.
 
Back
Top Bottom