đź“…This fact may be outdated

This was true from 2010-2017. Facebook implemented an anti-spam system that prevented users from blocking Zuckerberg (and others who were mass-blocked). The company said it would fix the issue but articles only confirm this through 2017. Current status in 2025 is unclear.

You can't block Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook.

You Couldn't Block Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook

5k viewsPosted 10 years agoUpdated 4 hours ago

Imagine owning a social network with billions of users but being unable to block its founder. For years, that was reality on Facebook—users who tried to block Mark Zuckerberg got an error message: "This profile can't be blocked for now." The same applied to his wife, Priscilla Chan.

When users discovered this in 2017, it sparked immediate backlash. Was Zuckerberg above his own platform's rules? The optics looked terrible: the CEO of a company facing privacy scandals couldn't be blocked by the people whose data he controlled.

Facebook's Explanation: Anti-Spam Gone Wrong

Facebook's explanation was technical, not authoritarian. According to company spokespeople, the restriction wasn't specific to Zuckerberg—it was an automated anti-spam measure that kicked in when any account received an unusually high number of block attempts in a short period.

The system was designed to combat viral blocking campaigns, where groups of users would coordinate to mass-block someone as harassment or protest. When the threshold was hit, the platform temporarily prevented further blocks to protect the targeted account.

Zuckerberg and Chan simply triggered this protection because so many people tried to block them. In a platform with billions of users, even a tiny percentage trying to block the CEO adds up fast.

The Timeline

  • 2010: The anti-spam blocking system was implemented
  • 2017: Media outlets and users noticed Zuckerberg couldn't be blocked
  • September 2017: Facebook acknowledged the issue and promised a fix
  • Current status (2025): Unknown whether the restriction was ever lifted

Why It Mattered

The controversy highlighted a broader issue: automated systems often produce unintended consequences. A feature meant to protect harassment victims ended up protecting one of the world's most powerful tech executives from users who simply didn't want to see his posts.

Facebook told BuzzFeed News that a fix would roll out eventually, but the technical challenge would take time. Whether that ever happened remains unclear—the story faded from headlines without confirmation of a resolution.

Users did have one alternative: unfollowing Zuckerberg's account. This hid his posts from their feeds without blocking him entirely. Not quite the same level of control, but better than nothing for those who wanted distance from Facebook's founder on his own platform.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you block Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook?
As of 2017, users couldn't block Zuckerberg due to an anti-spam feature that protected accounts receiving mass blocking attempts. Facebook promised a fix but there's no confirmation whether this was resolved.
Why couldn't people block Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook?
Facebook's automated anti-spam system prevented blocking when an account received too many block attempts in a short time. So many users tried blocking Zuckerberg that he triggered this protection mechanism.
Who else couldn't be blocked on Facebook?
Priscilla Chan, Zuckerberg's wife, also couldn't be blocked. The restriction applied to any account that received an unusually high volume of blocking attempts, not just specific individuals.
When did Facebook fix the Mark Zuckerberg blocking issue?
Facebook acknowledged the problem in September 2017 and said a fix would come eventually. However, there's no public confirmation that the issue was ever resolved.
Can you unfollow Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook?
Yes, users could always unfollow Zuckerberg's account. This hides his posts from your feed without blocking him entirely, though it doesn't prevent him from seeing your public content.

Related Topics

More from Technology & Innovation