Meta just rolled out a new AI feature on Threads that’s already sparking user revolt. The company announced Tuesday it’s testing a taggable Meta AI account that answers questions and provides context in conversations – think xAI’s Grok for Threads. But there’s a catch that’s got users up in arms: you can’t block it. At all. The restriction, first reported by Engadget, represents a rare moment where Meta’s aggressive AI push collides head-on with user control, and the timing couldn’t be worse as the company races to catch rivals like OpenAI and Google.

Meta is learning the hard way that users notice when you take away their ability to say no. The company’s newest Threads experiment – a taggable AI account that jumps into conversations when summoned – launched Tuesday with what seems like a deliberate oversight. Users can’t block it, and the internet has thoughts.

The feature works like xAI’s Grok bot on X, where anyone can tag the Meta AI account to pull in answers or context about ongoing discussions. It’s a logical move for Meta as it tries to make its AI investments visible across its platform ecosystem. But the inability to block the account has turned what could’ve been a quiet feature launch into a user rights flashpoint.

According to Engadget’s reporting, Threads users discovered the blocking restriction almost immediately after the feature went live. The backlash highlights a growing tension in how tech companies deploy AI – the gap between what platforms want users to experience and what users actually want control over.

Meta has poured billions into its AI ambitions, spending heavily to hire top talent away from competitors like OpenAI and Anthropic. The company launched its Muse Spark model in April, positioning it as a multimodal breakthrough that could power everything from creative tools to conversational agents.

But the Threads AI account controversy reveals how quickly AI integration can backfire when platforms don’t give users an exit ramp. Blocking has become a fundamental social media control – a way for users to curate their experience and protect themselves from unwanted interactions. Removing that option for an AI account, even in a testing phase, sends a message about whose preferences matter.

The timing is particularly awkward for Meta. The company is already navigating criticism over how it trains AI models using user data, and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been vocal about the company’s commitment to open AI development. A feature that forces AI presence onto users without consent cuts against that narrative.

Compare this to how OpenAI and Google have approached AI chat integration. Both companies let users opt out or disengage from their AI features relatively easily. Google’s AI Overviews in search can be worked around, and OpenAI’s ChatGPT remains something users explicitly choose to engage with. Meta’s approach on Threads feels like the opposite – AI as ambient presence rather than optional tool.

The broader context matters here too. Social media platforms have spent years dealing with bot problems, spam accounts, and unwanted interactions. Users have learned to use blocking as their primary defense mechanism. When Meta makes an account unblockable – even its own AI – it breaks that established contract.

For Threads specifically, this creates an identity problem. The platform has positioned itself as a more controlled alternative to X, emphasizing user safety and moderation. But an AI account you can’t block undermines that positioning, especially when xAI’s Grok on X doesn’t carry the same restriction.

The feature is still in testing, which means Meta could reverse course. The company has shown willingness to pull back AI features before when user backlash gets loud enough. But the initial decision to launch without a blocking option suggests a fundamental miscalculation about how people want to interact with AI on social platforms.

What’s really at stake here isn’t just one AI account on one platform. It’s about precedent. If Meta successfully normalizes unblockable AI presence on Threads, other platforms will take note. The inability to opt out could become standard rather than exception, fundamentally changing how AI shows up in social spaces.

The user reaction also exposes something deeper: AI fatigue. After months of every tech company jamming AI into every product, users are pushing back on integrations that feel forced rather than helpful. Meta’s Threads AI might actually be useful in some contexts, but leading with restrictions instead of features guarantees resistance.

Meta’s unblockable AI account on Threads isn’t just a product misstep – it’s a test case for how much control platforms think they can take away in the name of AI innovation. The backlash suggests users have clearer boundaries than Meta anticipated. Whether the company walks back the restriction or doubles down will signal how seriously it takes user autonomy versus its AI ambitions. For now, Threads users are learning they can’t block Meta’s AI, but they can definitely complain about it loudly enough that the company might have to listen.