// TARGET: Peerlist
Audit level: focused · Risk score: 2/10
Peerlist
+-----------------------------------+ | PEERLIST | | Founded: 2021 | | Model: Proof-of-work profile | | Audience: Tech & design | | Verify: Work email only | | Feed: None (by design) | | Funding: Seed-stage | | Parent: Independent | +-----------------------------------+
section_01 — what is collected
Proof-of-work is the unit of profile
The central design choice is this: instead of asking you to write "Senior Product Manager at Acme Corp, 2019–present," Peerlist asks you to connect GitHub, Dribbble, Medium, Hashnode, YouTube, and similar verifiable sources. It pulls your actual contributions — commits, designs, articles, videos — and your profile is built around those artifacts.
The result is a dataset with a fundamentally different shape: lots of public-by-default work product, very little self-declared career history, no rich behavioral graph.
What this adds up to
The collection footprint is intrinsically smaller because the product doesn't need more. If you're not building a behavioral-ad business, you don't need dwell-time-per-post. If you're not building a recruiter-search business, you don't need every data point a Boolean query might hit on. A product that monetizes through a premium tier and recruiter subscriptions — without ads — has less reason to build a dossier on you.
This is the general pattern to watch. Professional-network products that don't sell ads collect less behavioral data. Products that don't show a ranked feed collect less engagement telemetry. Peerlist isn't the only example, but it's a clear one.
section_02 — who sees it
- Public viewers — your profile is publicly viewable at a personalized URL (peerlist.io/yourhandle). This is the point: it's a portable proof-of-work page.
- Peerlist users — same public view, with the ability to follow, react, and endorse
- Recruiters / companies — search functionality exists for hiring; subscription tiers apply
- Peerlist (internal) — standard internal access for moderation and platform operations
- Connected platforms — GitHub, Dribbble, Medium etc. see the OAuth scopes you authorized. These are the real data custodians for most of what's shown on your Peerlist profile.
That last point matters: the platforms you connect (GitHub is a Microsoft subsidiary, incidentally) already have the data Peerlist surfaces. Peerlist isn't creating a new dossier so much as composing a public-facing view over datasets that already exist. Which is both a privacy advantage (nothing new is being centralized about you) and a privacy caveat (you're now publicly associating accounts that were separately pseudonymous before).
section_03 — the scale caveat
What you give up to get this
Peerlist has, at most, a few hundred thousand users. This is not a number that's been independently audited; the platform doesn't publish current totals. Whatever the exact count, it's two to three orders of magnitude smaller than LinkedIn. That has obvious implications:
- The recruiter you want to reach is almost certainly not on Peerlist
- The hiring manager at your target company is almost certainly not on Peerlist
- Companies searching for candidates for non-tech, non-design roles mostly aren't on Peerlist
- If the platform runs out of funding or pivots, your "Peerlist as career anchor" strategy fails — a risk you already saw play out when Polywork shut down in January 2025
So the practical use of Peerlist isn't as a primary professional identity. It's as a portable, privacy-friendlier portfolio URL — one you control, that surfaces the best of your public work in a polished format, that you can link from a resume or in-bio on other platforms. Used that way, it's a net positive. Used as "my main LinkedIn replacement," it will disappoint.
section_04 — what to do
- Create a profile; connect GitHub / design sources you want to surface; leave disconnected anything you want to keep private
- Use peerlist.io/yourhandle as a link-in-bio or resume-header URL instead of a LinkedIn link when it fits
- Don't post anything on Peerlist you wouldn't post publicly elsewhere — it's designed as public proof-of-work, not private deliberation
- Keep LinkedIn alongside it; let Peerlist serve the "what I actually built" layer while LinkedIn serves the "where I worked and with whom" layer
- Re-evaluate if the platform gets acquired or raises a late-stage round — acquisitions tend to change data-use posture
Risk score: 2/10
Peerlist is the cleanest privacy posture in this audit. The collection footprint is small because the product doesn't need more. If you're in tech or design and want a portable, polished public profile that isn't centralizing new data about you, it's a solid supplementary tool. The tradeoff is scale — this is not where hiring happens for most roles, most of the time. Use it as a portfolio, not a primary network.