Removing impersonations on LinkedIn
LinkedIn sits at the centre of global B2B communication. The platform connects decision-makers, employees, and brands across every major market. That visibility makes it a prime target for impersonation, phishing, and corporate identity abuse. As threat actors refine social engineering tactics and exploit trust in professional networks, brands face growing exposure across fake profiles, fraudulent job ads, and cloned company pages.
About LinkedIn
Learning LinkedIn's backstory helps you understand how the platform operates, the faster you can detect and remove threats targeting your brand. Here are some key facts and figures:
Parent Company
Microsoft
Founded
May 2003, Mountain View, United States
Users
900M+ global members
Headquarters
Sunnyvale, California, United States
LinkedIn takeaways
LinkedIn operates as a professional networking platform where individuals and organisations build profiles, publish content, and engage directly with audiences. That open structure creates opportunities for impersonators to replicate trusted identities with minimal friction. Fake executives, cloned company pages, and fraudulent recruiters often appear highly credible, especially when supported by stolen branding assets and scraped employee data.
Threat actors rarely operate in isolation. They coordinate campaigns across email, domains, and social platforms, using LinkedIn as an entry point for broader phishing or fraud operations. Removing a fake profile often disrupts one node in a wider network rather than eliminating the threat entirely.
The problem with impersonations and scams on LinkedIn
LinkedIn’s trust-based ecosystem encourages connection and engagement, which attackers exploit. Impersonators send connection requests, build rapport, and then redirect targets to malicious websites or fraudulent payment flows.
Fake job postings remain a persistent issue. Attackers advertise roles under well-known brands, then move candidates off-platform to collect personal data or payments. These listings often mimic legitimate hiring language and branding, making detection harder for both users and automated systems.
Profile cloning also scales quickly. Bad actors duplicate real executives or employees, reuse profile images, and replicate career histories. In some cases, they build entire fake company pages to support the narrative. The platform’s global reach and multilingual environment further complicates detection, especially when campaigns target specific regions with localised content.
LinkedIn reporting and takedown tools
For profiles and pages
Locate the profile or company page, select the Report option, and choose impersonation or fraud. Provide supporting evidence, including official company links and proof of identity. Verified reports typically move faster through review.
For job ads
Report fraudulent listings directly from the job post. Include details on brand misuse, incorrect URLs, or suspicious recruiter behaviour. Monitoring outbound links remains critical, as many scams rely on redirecting users off-platform.