Sanjana Yadav received an unsolicited DM on LinkedIn from a man named Saurabh — asking for her number.
When she called him out, his defence was remarkable in its audacity:
"Kisi anjaan ldki ko linkedin pe dm krke number hi toh maanga hai" — "I just asked for a number."
"Maine galat trh se baat thodi kri hai" — "I didn't say anything that wrong."
"Aap toh ache insaan ho screenshot daalke gandi harkat thode kroge" — "You're a good person, you wouldn't screenshot this."
He was wrong on all three counts.
Sanjana posted it publicly, called out his company AML RightSource, and made sure he got exactly the kind of attention he earned. He blocked her shortly after. Classic.
LinkedIn is not a dating app. Asking a stranger for her number on a professional platform is not a minor slip — it is harassment. And the "you're too nice to expose me" line is a manipulation tactic, not an apology.
She held nothing back. And she was right not to.