LinkedIn Corporation Announces Sweeping Reforms in Historic “Let People Talk Like Humans Again” Initiative

Platform to permit personal pronouns, honest emotions, and sentences a normal person might actually say out loud
SUNNYVALE, CA — April 17, 2026 For Immediate Release

LinkedIn (NYSE: LNKD), the world’s largest professional networking platform and the number-one source of posts that make you feel bad about yourself at 7:45 a.m., today announced a landmark revision to its Terms of Service that will, for the first time since the platform’s founding, permit users to employ personal pronouns, honest emotions, and sentences that a normal person might actually say out loud.

The changes, internally code-named Project: Stop It, take effect May 1, 2026.

Personal Pronouns Restored to the English Language

The most significant reform lifts LinkedIn’s long-standing prohibition on the word “I” at the beginning of celebratory posts. Since 2017, users wishing to announce a new job, promotion, or completion of a routine task have been required to begin with the word “Thrilled,” as if they were a telegram from 1923 or a golden retriever who just learned to type.

✗ Old TOS
“Thrilled to announce I’ve joined Deloitte”
✓ New TOS
“I got a new job.”
“We recognize that removing the subject from a sentence with surgical pliers does not constitute a professional tone. Users may now say ‘I’m thrilled,’ or even — and we know this is radical — ‘I got a new job.’” — Brenda Tan, Chief Language Officer, LinkedIn

The companion phrase “Humbled to announce” has also been flagged for retirement. “No one in recorded history has ever been humbled by their own promotion,” Tan added. “We checked.”

“Happy To” No Longer Required When Offering Things You Are Doing on Purpose

Under the old TOS, users soliciting business were required to frame every offer as though they were doing the recipient an enormous emotional favor. A freelance designer could not simply say, “I can send you my portfolio,” but was instead obligated to write, “Happy to send you my portfolio!” — as if sharing a PDF were an act of spontaneous generosity that just happened to include a rate sheet.

✗ Old TOS
“Happy to send you free samples!”
✓ New TOS
“I can send you free samples if you’d like.”
“Going forward, users may offer their services using declarative sentences. You don’t have to pretend it’s Christmas morning every time someone asks about your consulting rates.” — Brenda Tan

Ban Lifted on Stories That Don’t End with a Lesson

Previously, all LinkedIn anecdotes — including stories about coffee shops, airport delays, and interactions with taxi drivers — were required to conclude with a numbered list of “takeaways” or the phrase “And that’s when I realized…” followed by a business insight the author clearly thought of first and built the story around.

Under the new rules, users may now tell a story that is simply a story. A post about a rude waiter is no longer required to contain the sentence, “This taught me three things about servant leadership.”

“Approximately 98.6% of LinkedIn life lessons were reverse-engineered from the moral backward. Someone decides they want to post about ‘radical candor’ and then invents a child who said something profound at a grocery store. We’re done.” — Amir Patel, Head of Data Science, LinkedIn

Engagement Pods and Performative Comment Enthusiasm Declassified

LinkedIn will also retire its unwritten requirement that users respond to every acquaintance’s post as though they have just witnessed the moon landing. Comments such as “This 👏 is 👏 everything,” “So needed,” and “Wow, just wow — more people need to hear this” on a post about someone completing a Coursera certificate will now be recognized for what they are: a reciprocal engagement agreement between two people who have never met in person.

✗ Old TOS
“Absolutely brilliant insight, John!”
✓ New TOS
[Labeled: Engagement Pod — John commented on this user’s post 11 minutes earlier]

“Agree?” No Longer Permitted as a Closing Argument

Effective immediately, LinkedIn posts may no longer end with the single word “Agree?” or its more aggressive cousin, “Thoughts?” These rhetorical devices, which frame an uncontroversial opinion as a daring act of intellectual courage, have been reclassified as a Class 2 Platform Nuisance.

“When someone writes four paragraphs about how companies should treat employees with respect and then writes ‘Agree?’ — as if this might be controversial — it is not a discussion prompt. It is a like-farming mechanism, and we will be treating it as one. Repeat offenders will have their post reach reduced to their immediate family.” — Amir Patel

Mandatory Humility Backstory Requirement Removed

Perhaps the most celebrated change: users announcing a success will no longer be required to first describe a period of suffering, rejection, or near-homelessness to justify their achievement. Under the old TOS, a post about getting a book deal had to begin with at least two paragraphs about sleeping on a friend’s couch and eating canned soup. A promotion required a minimum of one reference to imposter syndrome.

✗ Old TOS
“If you’d told 22-year-old me, eating ramen in a basement, that one day I’d be Regional Sales Manager…”
✓ New TOS
“I got promoted.”
“We had a user who wrote 800 words about growing up without running water before announcing he’d been named Regional Sales Manager at a midsize plumbing supply company. It was too on the nose. We had to act.” — Brenda Tan

Going forward, the phrase “If you’d told 22-year-old me that one day I’d…” will trigger an automatic content warning.


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