The ad, released Wednesday, features an actor dressed as a Burger King employee, who says, "Okay, Google: What is the Whopper burger?"
The line is meant to trigger the device to reel off the definition of a Whopper using the first line of the burger's Wikipedia page. (Yes, the Whopper has its own Wikipedia page.)
Roughly three hours after the ad launched, the ad stopped working. Google's Home would only light up in response to the commercial's prompt and stay mum (although it will give you the first line of the Wikipedia article if you explicitly request the definition of a "Whopper burger").
The fast-food company confirmed that the ad no longer triggered the speaker, but it said it would still air the ad - and indicated that the ad may start working again. "You'll have to tune in tonight to see if the commercial triggers the Whopper sandwich definition response," said Burger King spokesman Brooke Scher Mogan.
Mogan said Burger King saw the ad as an opportunity to "do something exciting with the emerging technology of intelligent personal assistant devices."
Google did not respond to requests for comment.
A person familiar with the matter but not authorized to speak on the record said the fast-food chain did not consult Google before making the commercial.
When you take over someones phone or tablet and have it do your own remote commands intentionally, you are HACKING.
While commercials - often those about home hubs - have accidentally triggered voice assistants in people's homes before, this seems to be the first time an ad has tried to do it intentionally. Based on comments on the ad's YouTube page, many consumers did not appreciate having their devices hijacked.
"When you take over someones phone or tablet and have it do your own remote commands intentionally, you are HACKING," read one comment.
Once the ad started gaining attention, Wikipedia users began altering the first line of the article about Burger King's Whopper. These edits included references to the burger as "cancer-causing" and stating that its ingredients include "cyanide."
It appears that Burger King itself tried to fix the Wikipedia problem. The first sentence changed to a suspiciously glowing description of the Whopper, authored by user "Fermachado123" - a name that sounds similar to Fernando Machado, Burger King's senior vice president for global brand management.
We're continuing to experiment with new ways to surface unique content for users and we could have done better in this case.
Burger King did not confirm or deny that Machado edited the article.
Privacy concerns about voice-activated speakers and the connected home have been on the rise as more companies have introduced these products, putting pressure on the makers of voice-operated security systems and door locks to ensure that their devices can't be triggered by unauthorised voices.
The place of advertising on the Google Home and similar products has been thoroughly debated by users as they have become more commonplace. Many users don't want to be spammed with ads delivered by what they consider personal assistants. Google subjected itself to criticism after Home users heard what appeared to be an unprompted plug for Disney's "Beauty and Beast" when the film opened last month.
Google said at the time that mentioning the film wasn't meant to be an ad but simply a notice to users about what was timely that day, according to a statement provided to CNET.
"We're continuing to experiment with new ways to surface unique content for users and we could have done better in this case," a Google spokesman said.