Yes. WorkScore is built on the principle that honest feedback requires genuine anonymity — and that anonymity is protected at every level.
Your identity as a rater is never revealed
When someone receives a rating, they can see the rating value, the date it was submitted, and the company you have in common. They never see your name or anything that directly identifies you as the rater.
What you can see about ratings you've received
Your ratings feed shows each rating you've received with three data points: the score, the date, and your shared employer. Nothing more.
A note on small teams
If you worked at a small company and receive a rating tied to that employer, the pool of eligible raters may be limited. WorkScore can't prevent you from drawing your own conclusions — but the system never confirms or reveals who rated you.
Why your score unlocks the way it does
You can see your WorkScore once you've rated five coworkers — not once you've received a certain number of ratings. This is intentional. Rating others is how the network generates value for everyone, and it ensures that people engaging with the platform in good faith can see their score early.
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