Cape Argus

LinkedIn to allow data to be mined

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ONCE, Facebook allowed academic researcher­s access to its data. We know how that story ends: with the Cambridge Analytica scandal.

Now LinkedIn, the profession­al social networking site owned by Microsoft, says it will open its trove of data to academic researcher­s.

But the company, whose chief data officer Igor Perisic made the announceme­nt in a blog post on Monday, said it’s putting controls in place to protect user privacy.

The data will be restricted to only those whose academic proposals have been approved. The researcher­s will only have access to aggregate, anonymised data and will only be able to use it within a secure “sandbox”, he wrote. That means they won’t be able to download data themselves.

The academics will not be able to “obtain or retain data beyond the scope of the research project”, LinkedIn said. Its legal and security teams will vet all proposals to access the data, and only projects related to “economic opportunit­y with an eye toward enabling a level playing field for economic outcomes” will be approved.

Perisic said the company was mostly looking to advance the state of knowledge about the labour market and the economy. “This is not about having a direct product impact,” he said. But he said that in the past, LinkedIn’s collaborat­ion with academics has sometimes led to improvemen­ts in the site.

For instance, Tufts University researcher Laura Gee used LinkedIn data to determine that for job postings that seemed more attractive to men, women could be encouraged to apply if the ads included informatio­n on the current number of other applicants. LinkedIn said it has used this insight to help customers improve their job postings.

In addition, the chance to collaborat­e with outside academics on interestin­g projects helps LinkedIn motivate and retain its own internal data scientists, Perisic said.

The company is calling for academics to submit project ideas in three broad areas: analytics, economics and artificial intelligen­ce. It will select teams on a rolling basis, Perisic said, with probably no more than a dozen teams being allowed to access to the data at one time.

The initiative, called the LinkedIn Economic Graph Research Program, is an expansion of an earlier collaborat­ion with outside economics researcher­s that the company created in 2015. That effort resulted in several path-breaking findings, the company said.

Other academics currently in the LinkedIn programme are looking at what factors contribute to team success and testing theories about on-the-job retraining.

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