Notion workspace duplication bug and forced AI features frustrate users
Notion's mobile app has a bug that duplicates workspaces without allowing renaming, preventing users from organizing their workspace properly. The app also pushes unwanted AI features that users did not request. Persistent unresolved bugs compound the frustration with the forced AI additions.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyNotion App Quality Declining with Accumulating Unresolved Bugs
A user reports that Notion has become increasingly unstable and bug-prone over time, requiring frequent restarts, while new AI features receive priority over fixing existing issues. Single-source complaint with no specific reproducible detail.
Notion Forces AI Features on Users and Cannot Be Disabled
Notion has integrated AI triggers into core editing interactions — including the spacebar — making it impossible for users to work without encountering AI prompts they did not request. Users who do not use AI features find core functionality has been deprioritized in favor of AI additions they cannot turn off. This forced adoption approach is alienating the platform's established power user base.
Productivity Apps Force Intrusive AI Features With No Disable Option
Notion users report that AI features are injected into the interface in ways that cannot be turned off, interrupting established workflows. The forced presence of AI suggestions creates friction for users who rely on the tool for structured, distraction-free work. This reflects a broader pattern where monetization of AI upsells overrides user control preferences.
Note-Taking Apps Force Workplace and AI Features on Personal Users
Personal users of Notion find their workflow disrupted as the product pivots toward team and AI features, hiding or removing the simple note-taking interface they depended on. Users who have no use for AI or multi-user collaboration have no opt-out, pushing them toward simpler alternatives like Obsidian.
Notion forces AI features with no opt-out for users who prefer classic mode
After Notion's AI rebrand, users cannot disable AI-related UI elements even if they do not use or want those features. This forces an unwanted interface on users who preferred the original workflow, reducing trust and usability.
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