Who Do You Trust Online—And Why? episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 19, 2026 · 49 MIN

Who Do You Trust Online—And Why?

from Podcasts Archives | TechSpective · host Tony Bradley

Trust on the internet used to be a fairly simple calculation. You looked for familiar names, recognizable brands, maybe a blue checkmark, and you made a judgment call. Today, that math often fails. AI has changed the game. Deepfakes are convincing. Entire personas can be spun up in minutes. Fraud doesn’t look sloppy anymore—it looks professional. And in many cases, it looks exactly like the people and platforms we already rely on. That’s the backdrop for my latest episode of the TechSpective Podcast, where I sat down with Oscar Rodriguez, who leads product efforts around trust at LinkedIn. The conversation quickly moved past features and announcements and into a much bigger question: how do we decide who to trust online when it’s getting harder to tell what’s real? LinkedIn has become my primary social platform over the past few years—partly by default, partly by design. As other platforms drifted further into chaos, LinkedIn positioned itself as the place where professional identity still mattered. But even there, the ground is shifting. The platform is more social than it used to be. The conversations are broader. And the risks are higher. In this episode, we dig into that evolution—not just how LinkedIn has changed, but why it’s changing and what that means for the people using it every day. We talk about professionalism as a concept, how it’s expanded beyond résumés and job postings, and why trying to rigidly police what “belongs” on a professional platform misses the point. At the same time, we don’t ignore the downside of that openness. One of the recurring themes in our conversation is signal versus noise. When you’re interacting with people you don’t know—often several degrees removed from your own network—what clues do you rely on to decide whether someone is legitimate? Mutual connections? Profile history? Gut instinct? Verification badges? Those signals matter more than ever, and not just on LinkedIn. As Oscar explains, trust has become a portable problem. We’re constantly being asked to prove who we are, where we work, or whether we belong—often across dozens of platforms that don’t talk to each other. That friction creates opportunity for abuse, but it also forces a conversation about how trust should work at internet scale. We also get into how AI is accelerating the arms race. The same tools that make it easier to create content and connect at scale also make it easier to deceive. Fraudsters don’t need to sound unprofessional anymore. Bots don’t look like bots. And “doing your own research” is a lot harder when expertise itself can be convincingly faked. Rather than offering simple answers, this episode focuses on the trade-offs. How much friction is acceptable in the name of safety? What does verification actually prove—and what doesn’t it prove? Should trust be assessed once, or continuously? And who ultimately bears responsibility when things go wrong: the platform, the user, or both? Listen to or watch the full episode of the TechSpective Podcast with Oscar Rodriguez to hear the full conversation.

NOW PLAYING

Who Do You Trust Online—And Why?

0:00 49:47

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Ask A Spaceman Archives - 365 Days of Astronomy Ask A Spaceman Archives - 365 Days of Astronomy Podcasting Astronomy Every Day of the Year French Your Way Jessica: Native French teacher founder of French Your Way Boost your French listening skills and test your comprehension with this one of a kind series of podcasts. Get the chance to listen to a real conversation between native speakers talking at normal speed AND customise your learning experience through carefully designed sets of questions (2 levels of difficulty) available for download at www.frenchvoicespodcast.com. All interviews also come with the transcript. French teacher Jessica interviews native speakers of French from around the world who share a bit of their life and passion. Where else would you meet in one same place a French yoga teacher based in Melbourne, a soap manufacturer from Provence, or a couple cycling around the world? The Lee Olsen Show Lee Olsen CJF I want to help you improve all areas of your life by 3 types of podcasts!👉Blood, Sweat & Blessings-Interviews of normal people that have achieved BIG things!👉Series!!! For Love of the Horse- Brad Jackman DVM & Lee Olsen CJF, how to help your horse!👉Business Tips- Proven Life Changing Business Strategies with Lee Olsen Hyperfluent Hypio Hyperfluent transmits straight from the heart of Hyperliquid, where culture, creativity, and capital converge. Anchored by the architects of Hypio—the decentralized cultural virus—each episode archives the minds engineering the blockchain built to house all finance. These conversations are traceable artifacts in HyperEVM’s evolution: not just what’s being built, but why it matters, how it mutates, and where it’s taking us next. Listen in for the blueprints, the blind spots, and the narrative weapons shaping tomorrow’s markets.Hyperfluent: learn the language, ride the wave, spread the strain.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Podcasts Archives | TechSpective?

This episode is 49 minutes long.

When was this Podcasts Archives | TechSpective episode published?

This episode was published on February 19, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Trust on the internet used to be a fairly simple calculation. You looked for familiar names, recognizable brands, maybe a blue checkmark, and you made a judgment call. Today, that math often fails. AI has changed the game. Deepfakes are...

Can I download this Podcasts Archives | TechSpective episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!