Since X’s late 2024 block update, blocked accounts can view public posts but still cannot follow, message, reply, like or repost; block now works mainly as an interaction barrier, not a visibility shield. Muted accounts are a separate, weaker case: the available sources describe mute as not the same as blocking, and...

Create a landscape editorial hero image for this Studio Global article: Why are X users seeing posts from blocked or muted accounts, and what does this say about the platform’s block feature?. Article summary: X users are seeing posts from blocked or muted accounts because X changed how blocking works and because mute/block are now more limited than many users expect. The change suggests X’s block feature is no longer a visibi. Topic tags: general, general web, user generated. Reference image context from search candidates: Reference image 1: visual subject "# Social media users frustrated by popular platform’s block feature: ‘Does this app even work?’. As of late, many users have reported that they’re seeing content from accounts they" source context "Here's why you're seeing posts from accounts you blocked on X - syracuse.com" Reference image 2: visual subject "# X Will Soon Let Users
If blocking on X feels less definitive than it used to, the reason is a product change, not just user confusion. X’s late-2024 update lets blocked accounts view public posts while keeping restrictions on follows, Direct Messages, replies, likes, reposts and other engagement [10][
15].
The result is a narrower block feature. For public accounts, block no longer reliably means “this account cannot see me.” It now mostly means “this account cannot interact with me through X’s normal engagement tools” [12][
15].
X began rolling out the block update in November 2024 after the change had been spotted and confirmed in September [10][
12]. Under the new behavior, if your posts are public, someone you blocked can still view them; they just cannot follow you, engage with your posts or send you Direct Messages . X’s own help page similarly defines block as a tool that restricts accounts from following, Direct Messaging and engaging with you .
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Since X’s late 2024 block update, blocked accounts can view public posts but still cannot follow, message, reply, like or repost; block now works mainly as an interaction barrier, not a visibility shield.
Since X’s late 2024 block update, blocked accounts can view public posts but still cannot follow, message, reply, like or repost; block now works mainly as an interaction barrier, not a visibility shield. Muted accounts are a separate, weaker case: the available sources describe mute as not the same as blocking, and the documented 2024 policy change is specifically about block [1][10].
The shift signals X’s preference to treat public posts as public, even to blocked users, while still limiting direct engagement [12][15].
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That is a meaningful change from how many users experienced block before. Fortune reported that previously, blocking prevented an account not only from replying to or mentioning a user but also from seeing what that user was posting inside X [2]. Engadget and Fortune both described the new in-app message shown to blocked accounts: they can view public posts, but they cannot engage, follow or message the account that blocked them [
2][
7].
There is one important caveat: public posts were never the same as private posts. The Register noted that blocked users could already view public posts by logging out or using an incognito browser window, which allowed viewing but not interaction [4]. X’s update effectively brings that public-view behavior into the logged-in blocked-user experience.
| Action | Current effect on X |
|---|---|
| View public posts | Allowed for blocked accounts when the blocker’s posts are public [ |
| Follow or Direct Message | Still restricted by block [ |
| Reply, like, repost or otherwise engage | Still restricted; the account can view public posts but cannot engage with them [ |
| View protected posts | Not allowed; X says protected posts are shown only to followers, and blocked accounts cannot see them [ |
Mute is not the same control as block. The available reporting here documents a block-policy change, not a separate 2024 overhaul of mute. KTVU notes that muting on X does not block a user [1].
That matters because users often expect “mute” and “block” to create the same kind of boundary. They do not. The confirmed change is that blocked accounts can now view public posts; mute should not be treated as a privacy wall or a substitute for protecting an account [1][
10][
15].
X has moved block away from being a visibility boundary and toward being an interaction boundary. TechCrunch reported that users objected to the change on safety grounds because they did not want blocked users seeing their posts [10]. X’s rationale, as reported by KTVU, was tied to “greater transparency” around public posts [
1]. Elon Musk summarized the principle in September: the block function would stop an account from engaging, “but not block seeing” a public post [
12].
For users, the trade-off is clear. A public X account now gets less personal boundary from block than many users expected. Stronger visibility control requires protected posts, which X says are visible only to followers and not to blocked accounts [13][
15].
If you want to stop someone from replying, liking, reposting, following or sending DMs, block still serves that purpose [10][
15]. If you want to stop blocked accounts from seeing your posts, a public account is no longer enough; X’s documented option is to protect your posts [
15]. If you use mute, treat it as a weaker control than block, not as a safety or privacy barrier [
1].
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