Social Media

LinkedIn Will Now Allow More Types of Newsworthy Content Along With Professional One

The professional networking platform LinkedIn has updated its community guidelines to allow certain content that would otherwise violate its standards, provided it is deemed educational, journalistic or in the public interest.

According to LinkedIn’s published policy, the platform may now allow content that violates its rules if it satisfies certain “newsworthy” or educational criteria.

Our Professional Community Policies are clear: LinkedIn is a place for safe, trusted, and professional content. There are rare times, however, when content that violates our policies is educational or newsworthy enough that keeping it on the platform is in the public interest. We have updated our Professional Community Policies to provide clarity about the limited cases in which we would allow this content on the platform due to its educational or newsworthy value. This could be content ranging from medical procedures performed by a surgeon or real-world images of war shared for awareness or newsworthy purposes.

We conduct a careful review of content that may call for newsworthy treatment, balancing the potential harm of leaving it on the platform against the value to members and the public by allowing it. Factors we consider include educational value, relationship to major events of the day, the speaker or content author, and whether it concerns matters of public importance. When newsworthy content might be graphic or disturbing, we will include a warning screen.

Examples given include real-world images of war, medical or surgical content, or other graphic scenes if they are being shared for awareness or news purposes. LinkedIn says that in such cases, it considers factors like educational value, relationship to major events of the day, the speaker or content author and whether it concerns matters of public importance.

LinkedIn appears to be responding to an evolving role, from a purely career and professional update platform to a broader discussion space where topical issues, commentary and multimedia play a growing part.

This shift aligns with broader industry trends where social platforms increasingly balance moderation with exceptions for journalistic or public-interest content. For example, platforms’ community standards have long allowed “newsworthy” or “public interest” exceptions in certain moderation rules.

For content creators and brands on LinkedIn, the update signals that posts which discuss serious professional or societal issues, even if the visuals might ordinarily trigger policy removal, may now have a clearer path to retention. At the same time, the professional nature of LinkedIn means context, source credibility and framing still matter.