Is there a Fediverse alternative for LinkedIn?

https://slashdot.org/story/431408

#justask #linkedin #jobsonmastodon

Laid-Off California Tech Workers Are Sick To Death of LinkedIn - Slashdot

An anonymous reader quotes a report from SFGATE: Over the past few years, scores of California tech workers have ended up in the exact same position: laid-off, looking for work on LinkedIn and sick of it. LinkedIn, part job site and part social network, has become an all but necessary tool for the o...

So it seems there is a privacy focussed (European) alternative to LinkedIn: Quodari.

https://quodari.com/en/about-us-a

I just heard about them in the latest @bitsoffreedom podcast, and need to investigate further. Does anyone here on the #fediverse heard of them? Do they have a @qoudari handle here?

#quodari #linkedin

About us :: The private social network

We are a very experienced and international team, with roots in The Netherlands. The development is for a large part done offshore, so we can make speed and control our costs. The Quodari team currently consists of 10 people.

@voorstad @bitsoffreedom

Hi Eelco, ik ben oprichter van Quodari. We bieden een breed toepasbaar platform voor het (privacy-vriendelijk) delen van nieuws, kennis en alle andere vormen van content, zowel voor zakelijk als particulier gebruik.

Als privé digitaal archief, voor groepen, communities, samenwerkingsprojecten, verenigingen, families, of als alternatief kanaal voor publiekscommunicatie, zoals dat van bitsoffreedom: https://bitsoffreedom.quodari.com

Bij interesse vertel ik graag meer!
gr Aart

Bits of Freedom

@aartjoppe @voorstad @bitsoffreedom

We tried #Quodari for a while, but we stopped using it after almost month because we couldn't understand the language of most part of posts and we couldn't find new accounts to follow in our language. But we'll keep our account there. (https://public.quodari.com/public/profile/Le5NoaYA7E)

It doesn't seem like it's a replacement for LinkedIn. It feels more like a mix of Mastodon and Facebook, but it's also completely different. Looking at the public feed, it seems that the service is mainly used by people in the Netherlands/Belgium, so there's a language barrier for users from other countries. This isn't a problem in itself, but it will take some time to expand to other countries.

All Europeans