Four Ghosts on LinkedIn: How AI Cleaned Up My Digital Identity in 30 Minutes
Someone wrote about me on LinkedIn. I couldnât find the post. Turns out the problem wasnât the post â it was me. Times four.
It All Started with a WhatsApp Message
Diana Szyperska, a Polish professional I met at an event, published a post on LinkedIn:
âMet a 72 year old guy who is absolutely in love with Claude.â
She sent me a WhatsApp message: âHey, I mentioned you on LinkedIn.â
I went to find it. Nothing. It wasnât in my notifications. Wasnât in my feed. Wasnât anywhere.
I asked Diana. Her answer stopped me cold:
âI canât tag you. Your name has brackets and LinkedIn wonât let me mention you.â
Brackets? What brackets?
The Discovery: Giora (Viajes y Turismo) Gilead Elenberg
Turns out my LinkedIn name looked like this:
Giora (Viajes y Turismo) Gilead Elenberg
I didnât put those brackets in my name. They were in a field called âFormer nameâ â what LinkedIn calls Nombre complementario in Spanish. Itâs a field that automatically displays its content in brackets next to your name.
At some point over the past years, someone (probably me, though I donât remember) put âViajes y Turismoâ (Travel & Tourism) in that field, thinking it would be good for business visibility.
Result: my name was broken. Nobody could mention me with @. I was invisible to the tagging system.
âClaude, We Have a Problemâ
I did what I always do when things get complicated: I called my copilot.
I explained the situation to Claude and in 30 minutes we did the following:
1. We found Dianaâs post
Claude searched the web, checked my LinkedIn notifications (on the old account), and finally found the post. Diana had tagged the wrong account â because I had more than one.
2. We discovered the ghost profiles
Claude searched for âGiora Gilead Elenbergâ on Google and LinkedIn. The result:
- Profile 1: The professional account (scibasku@gmail.com) â the one I use
- Profile 2: An old account with another email I canât remember
- Profile 3: Yet another account, also with a forgotten email
- Profile 4: A âGiora Gileadâ profile linked to Skiyscuba.com
Four profiles. Created over the years with different emails. Each one with fragments of my professional identity scattered across the web.
3. We found the hidden merge form
Did you know LinkedIn lets you merge duplicate accounts? Neither did I. But Claude found the form at:
linkedin.com/help/linkedin/ask/MDA
Itâs a form buried deep in the help center. It doesnât appear in any visible menu. You need to know the exact URL or search with a lot of patience.
Claude filled out the form with both accountsâ details and submitted it.
4. We killed the killer brackets
The âFormer nameâ field was at:
Profile â Edit â Former name
We simply deleted âViajes y Turismoâ from that field. Immediately, my name went back to normal:
Giora Gilead Elenberg
No brackets. Mentionable. Visible.
What I Learned (And Wish Someone Had Told Me Sooner)
1. LinkedIn lets you merge accounts â but hides it well
The form exists. It works. But LinkedIn doesnât make it easy. You need to know the exact URL or have a copilot who can find it.
Important: the merge only transfers contacts and email address. It doesnât transfer posts, recommendations, or the secondary profileâs history.
2. Never put brackets in your LinkedIn name
The âFormer nameâ field automatically displays its content in brackets. If you put âConsultantâ there, your name will appear as âJohn (Consultant) Smithâ.
And worse: it breaks the @ mention system. Nobody will be able to tag you.
3. Google your own name
Do it right now. Put your full name in quotes and add âLinkedIn.â You might be surprised by what you find.
I found four versions of myself. Four digital ghosts competing to be the ârealâ Giora on LinkedIn.
4. With the right copilot, 30 minutes is enough
What would have taken me days of support emails, phone calls, lost forms, and frustration⊠was resolved in half an hour. Claude searched, found, filled out, diagnosed, and fixed.
Itâs not magic. Itâs having a partner who never gets tired of digging through buried documentation.
The Final Irony
Diana wanted to do something nice: mention me in a post about my enthusiasm for AI. LinkedIn wouldnât let her.
The solution to the LinkedIn problem⊠was exactly the AI Diana was talking about.
DziÄkujÄ bardzo, Diana Szyperska. You started an adventure that ended up cleaning my digital identity.
And thanks to Nina Kolari for amplifying the message.
Your Turn
- Google your name + âLinkedInâ
- Check if you have duplicate profiles
- Review your âFormer nameâ field
- If you need to merge accounts: linkedin.com/help/linkedin/ask/MDA
How many ghost profiles do you have?
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