Just when you thought he couldn’t make it any worse, Elon Musk has delivered.
The owner of X has already run the social media platform that he bought into the ground financially, but he’s still hard at work in the lab hatching up new ways to make it even more unpleasant. His latest innovation: changing the block feature in a way that makes users more vulnerable to harassment and abuse — and generally makes the platform a worse user experience.
Yet again, Musk seems profoundly out of touch with the average user experience.
Under the previous feature, if you blocked someone, then that account could no longer see your account or your posts or interact with them. Now the block feature is being made softer: If you block an account, it can’t interact with your posts but it can still view your account and posts. It’s unclear exactly when the change will take effect throughout the site, but X has been notifying users that it will be changing soon.
That might sound like a small change but it’s significant. Blocking is a tool that can help you wall off users who harass, stalk or bully you. The change makes it easier for bad actors to track what you’re saying and — especially in the case of a big account — send waves of harassers in your direction. Ultimately it increases the user’s vulnerability to abuse and doxing.
A robust block feature is especially important for users who are particularly vulnerable to abusive or predatory behavior, such as women, members of the LGBTQ community and young people. A report by Thorn, a tech nonprofit combating child sexual abuse, notes that minors “use blocking and leverage it as a tool for cutting off contact in an attempt to stop future harassment.”
Musk’s softer block feature isn’t the worst thing in the world. It can still serve as a meaningful deterrent to abuse. Moreover, the old block feature was not an insurmountable wall against abuse. And ultimately, users can always make their account private to try to avoid a storm of harassment.








