LinkedIn will let you show off your vibration coding skills with a certificate

Finally, a way to prove to your LinkedIn followers that you are adept at vibration coding.

LinkedIn announced a new partnership on Wednesday that will allow users to view official AI skill certifications based on usage data from leading AI applications. Integration includes the Descript video and podcast editor, Lovable and Replit encoding apps, and the Relay.app AI agent creation platform.

These platforms will use artificial intelligence to assess your skills as you use them and generate a certificate based on your usage patterns, product scores and tool proficiency. The Microsoft-owned social network did not provide exact details on what users would need to do to qualify as proficient in using the platform.

Once awarded, certifications will appear on your LinkedIn profile alongside other professional skills.

LinkedIn plans to add additional partners to the program in the coming months, including Gamma, GitHub and Zapier. The platform also invites companies to cooperate register interest in being a partner of the new verified skills program.

“The job requires proficiency in the technology your employer relies on and proficiency in artificial intelligence. The ability to use these tools to deliver services is the most in-demand skill today. Today, trust matters more than ever. More than 100 million professionals have verified their identity on LinkedIn. Now, with the addition of verified skills, you can add an additional way to prove what you can actually do,” said Hari Srinivasan, vice president of product at LinkedIn, in a statement.

According to a report by the education platform edX published in August last year, the number job offers that required AI as a skill has doubled in the last 12 months. A separate report from Indeed's Hiring Lab repeated the same trend and noted that mentions of the number of job openings in the U.S. The number of AI-related keywords increased to 4.2% by the end of 2025. The report mentioned that technology is still the most common sector where companies use AI-related words in posts, but the number of other sectors such as banking and marketing is also growing.

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