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The problem AI content moderation cannot solve AI powers citizen-led disaster relief from afar for Venezuela The Gulf has billions to spend on AI. It still needs Nvidia India’s crackdown on a new WhatsApp feature risks setting a global precedent Older adults know AI is slop. They just like it Your next nurse may monitor you from the Philippines Data centers should benefit the cities that power them China’s AI boom is creating a different kind of entrepreneur China’s web novel platforms embraced AI. Now they are fighting it India is testing an alternative to Silicon Valley’s AI playbook China’s EV makers are taking over the European factories Ford and Nissan can’t fill America’s immigrant tech workers are paying an uncertainty tax I went to the Maldives. Everyone wanted to talk about Temu What happened to China’s overseas EV factory boom? China and the West are taking opposite paths on EV battery recycling The AI-powered World Cup runs on thousands of data workers Chinese universities are cutting language majors to make way for AI GoPro and Roomba were U.S. pioneers. Chinese rivals now dominate Chile turned to China for an undersea cable. The U.S. said no When Americans choose Chinese AI Spotify’s post-English AI future Can open-source beat OpenAI? What the SpaceX IPO reveals about Gulf money in AI China builds a rival satellite constellation as SpaceX goes public Big Tech, big cons: Scammers are hiding in the apps that make your life easy The Great AI Divide: Navigating U.S. and Chinese dominance As the world embraces EVs, the U.S. hits the brakes Silicon Valley’s lure is fading for India’s tech talent What to read: A summer book list Scarcity is driving AI innovation outside Silicon Valley China is training a robot future — one folded shirt at a time EVs are getting more affordable worldwide — except in the U.S. India’s AI deal with the UAE challenges U.S. cloud dominance Pope’s encyclical raises questions on who gets to shape AI China’s tech rise is creating a new kind of tourism U.S. companies have an AI problem. Indian IT wants to be the solution The agentic divide: Why "good enough" AI isn’t enough to survive the new economy U.S. versus China: Can open-source beat OpenAI? AI is minting new billionaires, and workers want their share What AI race? China and U.S. AI worlds are tightly connected Pushing back from Big Tech: Africa’s hard road to AI sovereignty The UAE’s OPEC exit frees up oil wealth as it bets big on AI Silicon Valley keeps misreading China’s role in tech India’s VCs are beating American investors at home Can we really keep kids safe online? What's at stake for tech at the Trump-Xi meeting Taiwan’s chips power the global economy. China holds the leverage Some Taiwanese drone math ahead of the Xi-Trump visit Five times AI hallucinations embarrassed governments The Chinese EV standard winning globally is banned in the U.S. The global cybersecurity gap deepens as AI-powered attacks surge Motorola’s India lawsuit could make platforms police speech faster How the vinyl revival fills the gaps streaming left behind Big Tech is moving data out of the Gulf through Iraqi oil pipelines An old railroad is key to U.S.-China race for critical metals in Africa South Korean probe tests U.S. willingness to protect its tech giants abroad The quiet layoffs sweeping China’s tech giants Humanitarian aid turns to AI as crises outpace capacity The global edtech boom is fading as investors look elsewhere Deadly deepfakes: A survival guide for the age of algorithmic war Why AI alone cannot fix social problems Netflix’s AI deal puts the global VFX workforce at risk Bangladesh's gig workers are stuck in gas lines as Iran-U.S. war strains fuel supply AI is about to make the global e-waste crisis much worse The Mexican security company with a $1.27 billion surveillance empire Voice actors fight to save their livelihoods and local cultures from Hollywood's AI push RedNote chases U.S. expansion after its "TikTok refugee" moment fades In its push to become Big Tech’s data center hub, India is overlooking local resistance Chinese entrepreneurs should go global before they go viral War in the Gulf could tilt the cloud race toward China A Mexican surveillance giant you’ve never heard of is now watching the U.S. border Winners of the 2026 Photo Contest India’s frugal AI models are a blueprint for resource-strapped nations “Data embassies” and safeguarding digital assets during wartime Amazon is betting on speed in a market that may not need it Nations priced out of Big AI are building with frugal models In the Gulf, GPS jamming leaves delivery drivers navigating blind “This is unprecedented”: America's AI boom is leaving the rest of the world behind Workers around the world are not getting what they want from AI The world’s largest humanoid robot maker is going public
The Filipino virtual assistants behind LinkedIn's "thought leadership" content mill
Michael Beltran · 2026-05-18 · via Rest of World -

iStock/Rest of World

In the spring of 2025, the CEO of a European childcare startup posted a brief write-up about the qualities of a good leader on their LinkedIn page. Dozens of executives responded with comments like “Beautifully said,” “Leadership isn’t about titles. It’s about kindness,” and “Leadership is about action, influence, and integrity, not titles.”

LinkedIn is peppered with posts like these. But in this case, none of the executives were personally involved with the exchange. The posts and comments were produced by virtual assistants based in the Philippines, using generative artificial intelligence tools.

Rest of World spoke to six Filipino virtual assistants and two agencies who described a unique industry of low-paid and AI-assisted offshore workers producing content for executives and so-called thought leaders on LinkedIn. The names of the virtual assistants have been changed to protect their jobs. A LinkedIn representative told Rest of World the platform was attempting to crack down on this kind of behavior.

As a country with the third-largest English-speaking population, the Philippines is already well known for being an offshore labor hub. The virtual-assistant industry emerged in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, as American and European businesses sought inexpensive ways to offshore administrative work. A 2025 report by Future Markets Insight, an India-based market research and consulting firm, projects that the market for AI-assisted virtual assistants is expected to grow by 182% in the next decade from its current $19.5 billion valuation.

182% The market growth expected for AI-assisted virtual assistants over the next decade.

Mark Graham, professor of internet geography at the Oxford Internet Institute, told Rest of World Filipino virtual assistants are definitely at the center of the industry, branching out from the country’s call center ecosystem into a broader range of remote work. 

In 2022, the IT and Business Process Association of the Philippines noted an increase in the industry workforce headed to remote setups. By July 2023, it said that nearly half of the employees at its 400 member companies had transitioned to remote roles. 

These virtual assistants include individuals like Renee, a 27-year-old from Rizal Province, who described her job as posting and commenting on LinkedIn on  behalf of a London-based strategic investor. Renee was provided with a four-page prompt, written like a memo, with the investor’s biography, a list of her most important concerns, and her favorite books.

Renee generated 30–40 comments per day using ChatGPT, prioritizing engagement with LinkedIn accounts that regularly garnered a high number of likes and reposts.

A LinkedIn post titled "Your Title Doesn’t Make You a Leader—Your Actions Do," discussing leadership qualities and influence.

A “thought leadership”-style post generated by a virtual assistant on behalf of an executive. LinkedIn

Listings on job boards like Jobstreet and Indeed typically advertise $4 to $7 an hour to do tasks like bookkeeping, managing appointments, and social media marketing. Interviews conducted with Rest of World suggest that an increasing number of virtual assistants are asked to use generative AI to produce LinkedIn content on behalf of executives by writing posts, and engaging with other users.

Alon Pearl is the CEO of VA Masters, an Israeli recruitment firm that operates in the Philippines as virtual-assistant agency, and claims to have 500 clients primarily based in the U.S., Canada, Australia, and Europe. The firm says it has placed over 1,000 workers. LinkedIn content generation and marketing is one of the most requested tasks from clients in the e-commerce, real estate, fintech, and digital marketing sectors, Pearl told Rest of World. Their clients can save up to 80% on labor costs by hiring offshore compared to local hires, he said.

“A business that couldn’t afford a full-time social media manager or content strategist locally can now run consistent content, [lead-generating] campaigns, and community engagement at a fraction of the cost,” Pearl said.

Nina, a virtual assistant based in Manila, told Rest of World she spent two years in the role with a marketing agency called Impaxs, which assigned her to work for an electric vehicle company to generate LinkedIn content for its executives. She said she had to mimic a sense of authority on a subject she was unfamiliar with.

“I had to read up about electric-vehicle charging ports. I’d never even seen one in my life,” Nina said.

In a statement to Rest of World, LinkedIn said the platform is clamping down on “low quality, automated or generic” content. “While AI can be used to beat the blank page problem, our focus is on surfacing professional conversations that help people advance their careers,” the company said, emphasizing that its algorithm prioritizes authentic conversations. In March, the platform rolled out an AI system to weed out “engagement bait.”

The virtual assistants who spoke to Rest of World said that brand and personality promotion through repetitive posting is central to their daily responsibilities.

Alex, based in Quezon City, used to work at a call center but had a hard time dealing with the graveyard shift. They found a more schedule-friendly virtual assistant job through onlinejobs.ph, generating LinkedIn content. For four hours a day, Alex collaborated with their client to get acquainted with their tone, voice, and the desired concept for their brand. They used Canva to produce LinkedIn carousel posts.   

It’s all AI comments by fake people answered with fake replies by other fake people.”Alex, a virtual assistant

“The name of the game is daily posting — that’s how you get ahead of the algorithm on LinkedIn,” Alex told Rest of World.

Virtual assistants often use AI tools paid for by their clients to speed up the production of posts, comments, and images.

Robin, a 39-year-old virtual assistant based in Manila who has worked for seven agencies, said “Gemini is better at research but ChatGPT sounds more like a human.” Robin feeds prompts like, “create an outline for a high-performing blog post on the topic (insert topic),” and “make sure the structure is interesting, engaging and covers different angles of the topic that serves our client’s brand” into ChatGPT, then ports over the language to LinkedIn.

Alex and their network of about 20 other virtual assistants also collaborate to ensure engagement with each others’ clients. In a WhatsApp group chat, members notify one another about their new posts, prompting the others to use their accounts to comment on them, Alex said. The sheer volume of engagement leads to obvious mistakes. One assistant thoughtlessly commented “Huge win” on a post commemorating the September 11 attacks.

Alex and Robin shared several tell-tale signs that a LinkedIn thought leader’s account is managed offshore: daily posting, a sudden surge in followers, and replies to every comment.

“It’s alienation on top of alienation. What value am I actually making by throwing this garbage into the world?” said Robin.

Juan Gabriel Felix, a researcher at Sigla Research Center, a group studying digital labor, compared the mass of “homogenizing” AI-generated content on LinkedIn to the broader trend of slop piling up online.

“Influencers and thought leaders stand to gain from this practice where a self-sustaining industry of humans and bots generates an illusion of engagement,” he told Rest of World

Ivan Gonzales, a recruiter in the Philippines for Worca, an international talent and workforce agency connecting Asia’s digital labor with American employers, predicts AI will swallow the virtual-assistant industry eventually. He called the work a “dead-end job.”

Today, companies are “developing tools to minimize using [virtual assistants],” Gonzales said.  “That’s what many of our clients are exploring.”

Alex quit their virtual assistant job in late 2025, saying they couldn’t handle the “mind-numbing” workload anymore. “It’s all AI comments by fake people answered with fake replies by other fake people,” Alex said. “It’s so dead internet, like none of this is real.”