PSA: We just overhauled Lempod’s session architecture to handle LinkedIn’s new restriction flags

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Last Updated on 9 July 2026 by Lempod

If you’ve been running engagement loops lately, you’ve probably noticed LinkedIn’s security protocols getting way more aggressive with session drops and account restrictions. It’s been a massive headache for our members, and honestly, for our support team too.

We spent the last few weeks tearing down our session management architecture to fix this. The old way of handling static sessions just wasn’t cutting it anymore when LinkedIn started flagging automated connection handoffs.

Here is what we actually changed under the hood:

Instead of a standard token refresh, we rebuilt the routing layer. The system now actively hunts for your most stable active session before making a connection. More importantly, when a session does need to update, we’re now auto-backing up the previous session state in a sandbox before touching your auth data. It completely eliminates that micro-second “dropped connection” spike that usually trips LinkedIn’s alarms.

The short version: we’ve significantly dropped the restriction risk, and engagement delivery is way more reliable now.

You don’t need to do anything on your end. The update is fully rolled out and runs silently in the background. Just keep the app updated and try not to log into LinkedIn from 5 different devices at the exact same time (that still trips manual flags on LinkedIn’s end).

Happy to dig into the technical weeds in the comments if anyone is curious about the architecture.

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