2025/05/04

How We Faced Digital Exile: When Machines Decide Our Human Worth

Human silhouette behind digital bars

It began like any other day. Login screen. Password. Click. But instead of the familiar feed of connections and opportunities, a cold message greeted us: Account restricted. No warning, no clear explanation—just digital exile from LinkedIn, a platform that had become essential for sharing our innovations with the world.

My colleagues found ourselves branded as "unverified" by unseen algorithms. What does it mean to be "unverified" in a digital world? To have your digital existence questioned, your professional identity suspended by automated systems operating on logic we cannot fully comprehend?

Let's face this philosophical challenge :)

The Kafka-esque Nightmare

Franz Kafka once wrote: "Every revolution evaporates and leaves behind only the slime of a new bureaucracy." Perhaps the digital revolution is no different, except now the bureaucracy isn't staffed by disinterested civil servants but by lines of code—efficient, unfeeling, and operating at a scale that makes individual appeals seem futile.

Our attempts to resolve the situation felt like shouting into a void. Form submissions disappeared into digital ether. Automated responses offered vague explanations about "community guidelines" without specifying which ones we had violated. The lack of human contact was the most jarring aspect—no eyes to look into, no ears to hear our frustration.

The Philosophical Dimensions

This experience transcends mere inconvenience. It touches on fundamental questions about our relationship with technology and our place in an increasingly automated society.

Michel Foucault might view this as a new form of discipline and control: "There is no need for arms, physical violence, material constraints. Just a gaze. An inspecting gaze, a gaze which each individual under its weight will end by interiorizing to the point that he is his own overseer, each individual thus exercising this surveillance over, and against, himself." The modern digital panopticon doesn't need walls—it has terms of service agreements and community guidelines that we enforce upon ourselves, living in fear of transgression.

Jean Baudrillard would likely see our predicament as evidence of simulation overtaking reality: "The simulacrum is never that which conceals the truth—it is the truth which conceals that there is none. The simulacrum is true." Our professional identities, reduced to profiles and verification badges, become more "real" in the digital economy than our flesh-and-blood existence and actual accomplishments.

The Human Cost

Beyond philosophical musings lies a tangible impact. Innovation stifled. Connections severed. Opportunities missed. The algorithms that banned us don't calculate these costs. They can't quantify the frustration of explaining to partners why we've suddenly disappeared from the platform, or the effort of rebuilding digital credibility from scratch.

Simone Weil once wrote: "To be rooted is perhaps the most important and least recognized need of the human soul." Digital platforms have become new soil in which we root our professional identities. To be uprooted by automated decision-making creates a unique form of modern alienation.

Finding Meaning in Digital Exile

Albert Camus might suggest embracing the absurdity: "In the midst of winter, I found there was, within me, an invincible summer." Perhaps there's freedom in recognizing the capriciousness of digital existence. If our online presence can be erased or restricted on a whim, maybe we should build more resilient networks—ones that don't collapse when a single platform decides we don't meet its invisible criteria.

Hannah Arendt reminds us: "The sad truth is that most evil is done by people who never make up their minds to be good or evil." The systems that banned us weren't malicious—they were indifferent, which in some ways feels worse. No one decided we should be banned; a system simply executed its programming without concern for nuance or consequence.

Moving Forward

As we navigate this bizarre experience, I'm reminded of Nietzsche's words: "That which does not kill us, makes us stronger." This digital setback has forced us to reconsider how we share our innovations, how we connect with others, and how much power we're willing to cede to platforms we don't control.

Perhaps the most profound lesson is one of digital fragility. Our online existences—carefully curated, professionally valuable—rest upon foundations we don't own, governed by rules that shift like sand.

Martin Heidegger wrote: "The question concerning technology is never a technological one." Indeed, our experience shows that questions about technology quickly become questions about power, identity, truth, and what it means to be human in an increasingly automated world.

As we work to resolve our situation with LinkedIn (or explore alternatives), I carry these reflections with me. The machines may temporarily deny our digital existence, but they cannot diminish our human creativity, resilience, and capacity to find meaning even in algorithmic absurdity.