Professional networks as data infrastructure

The Hiring Graph

A job profile is no longer just a page recruiters read. It is a living graph of identity, relationships, timing, ambition, and risk.

Editorial edition 2026 Four platforms CSS charts No ad tracking
Your profile
Recruiters
Advertisers
Peers
Employers

Fig. 1 - Career identity becomes a multi-party graph.

The core finding

The profile is the smallest part of the file.

Most privacy discussions stop at the visible resume fields: name, title, school, company, photo. The hiring graph is bigger. It includes who searches for you, whose profiles you inspect, which roles you save, what you pause on, which complaints you post anonymously, and what your peers endorse as credible.

That does not make every platform bad. It means every platform asks for a trade: reach in exchange for inference. The useful question is whether the collection is proportionate to the hiring value you actually receive.

Career platforms do not only store what you say about work. They measure how work moves around you.
Editorial note, The Hiring Graph

Risk snapshot

Four platforms, four graph shapes.

LinkedIn 8.4
Blind 5.2
Xing 3.8
Peerlist 2.9

Composite editorial score: data volume, graph depth, sharing surface, jurisdiction, and practical controls.

Choose the lens

Read by platform.

LinkedIn

The maximum-reach graph: high utility, high observability, and a deep advertising and recruiting stack.

High reachHigh inference
Open the LinkedIn brief

Blind

The anonymity graph: employer verification and pseudonymous speech, with operational risk around stored content.

Anonymous layerServer-held DMs
Open the Blind brief

Xing

The regional graph: a conventional professional network inside a more constrained European legal frame.

EU postureSmaller reach
Open the Xing brief

Peerlist

The proof-of-work graph: smaller scale, fewer behavioral incentives, and a portfolio-first data model.

No ad feedNarrow footprint
Open the Peerlist brief

What we measure

A practical audit frame.

Each page uses the same questions so the platforms can be compared without forcing them into a false equivalence.

Collection

What you submit, what the product observes, and what the platform can infer from repeated behavior.

Access

Who can see, target, moderate, sell against, or lawfully request the resulting records.

Control

Whether settings are meaningful, understandable, reversible, and easy to find.

Utility

What career value you lose if you minimize, fragment, or leave the platform.

Field notes by email

Monthly updates on platform policy changes, new hiring tools, and corrections to this edition. No ad network, no third-party scripts.