LinkedIn visitors
Your LinkedIn headshot can be scraped for deepfakes
Check your exposure for free, then protect your photo in minutes. Keep the same look on LinkedIn while reducing facial-recognition matching risk.
Free first step
Run a risk scan before paying for anything.
Secure handling
Encrypted upload, controlled processing, optional deletion after protection.
One-time pricing
Protect individual photos for $2.99.
How it works
From LinkedIn click to protected photo
Upload your headshot
Use the same profile photo you already post publicly.
Get your risk readout
See if your current image is highly matchable before purchase.
Protect and re-upload
Download the protected version and replace your profile photo.
Common objection
Will uploading my photo make privacy worse?
No. The workflow is designed to reduce exposure risk, with encrypted transfer and storage controls.
Review privacy policyOutcome
See risk first, then decide
You do not need to commit up front. Start with a free scan, then protect only if the result shows meaningful exposure.
Run Free ScanProtect your photo for $2.99
One-time protection. No subscription required for a single photo.
FAQ
LinkedIn Headshot FAQ
These are the questions professionals ask most often before changing or protecting a LinkedIn profile photo.
Can LinkedIn profile photos be scraped?
Public or broadly visible professional headshots can be copied, indexed, or reused outside the original platform. That is why profile-photo hardening matters before publication, not only after a problem appears.
Will a protected LinkedIn photo still look professional?
That is the design goal. CloakBioGuard aims to preserve a normal-looking profile image for people while making it harder for facial-recognition systems to match reliably.
Should I scan my LinkedIn headshot before replacing it?
Yes. Running the free scan first gives you a lower-friction way to judge whether your current image appears meaningfully exposed before you decide to protect and re-upload it.
Is this just for LinkedIn?
No. LinkedIn is a common high-risk use case because the image is public and professionally tied to your identity, but the same logic applies to company bio pages, speaking pages, and other public headshots.