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      Home»Tech»X Rolls Out “Chat” with End-to-End Encryption and Video Calling Capabilities
      Tech

      X Rolls Out “Chat” with End-to-End Encryption and Video Calling Capabilities

      Updated:January 4, 20265 Mins Read
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      X Rolls Out “Chat” with End-to-End Encryption and Video Calling Capabilities
      X Rolls Out “Chat” with End-to-End Encryption and Video Calling Capabilities
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      X (formerly Twitter) has rolled out a major upgrade to its direct-messaging system, branded as “Chat”, which replaces traditional DMs with a full-blown encrypted messaging service supporting end-to-end encryption for messages and files, voice and video calls, message editing/deletion and disappearing messages. According to coverage, the update is live on iOS and the web (with Android support “coming soon”), and reflects CEO Elon Musk‘s vision of turning X into an “everything app”. Yet the service comes with caveats: metadata (such as who sent the message and when) is not encrypted, and X admits that there is currently no protection against man-in-the-middle attacks or monitoring by malicious insiders — a transparency which may raise questions about how “secure” the service truly is.

      Sources: The Verge, Money Control

      Key Takeaways

      – X’s new “Chat” feature signals a strategic shift from public broadcast messaging toward private, secure interaction and voice/video communication inside the platform.

      – While the announcement emphasizes “end-to-end encryption,” important technical limitations remain: message metadata is exposed and the system lacks safeguards against certain interception risks.

      – The launch plays into Elon Musk’s broader ambition to make X a one-stop “everything app” (messaging, calls, file sharing, possibly payments), but user trust and adoption will hinge on how robust the encryption and privacy guarantees turn out to be.

      In-Depth

      The rollout of X’s new Chat feature constitutes a possibly significant turning point in the platform’s evolution. Historically, X was focused on public posts, short comments, trending topics and open networks — but with Chat, the company is shifting toward the realm of private communications, positioning itself to compete not just with social feeds but with dedicated messaging and calling apps. For users, this means that the conversation thread you started in public might now segue — within the same app ecosystem — into a private voice call, video chat, disappearing message and encrypted exchange, all without leaving the X interface.

      The core promise here is one of increased control: senders can edit or delete previously sent messages, can choose to make them vanish after a set period, can block or receive notification of screenshots, can exchange files and make voice or video calls directly. For a user community that has sometimes been uneasy about third-party apps, or about leaving one platform for another, having those capabilities inside X may feel convenient and integrated.

      Yet the spin on encryption bears scrutiny. X openly concedes that while the message content and attached files are end-to-end encrypted, the metadata — which party messaged which and when — is still visible to the platform. Meanwhile, the company also acknowledges there is currently no built-in safeguard against interception by a malicious insider or by the platform itself (“if X itself … compromised a conversation, there would be no way for users to know”, as one support page notes). From a conservative perspective this is a mixed strength: the transparency is welcome, but true privacy advocates may view the residual vulnerability as a critical gap.

      Why roll this out now? Two strategic moves are at play. First, messaging apps with strong privacy stances (e.g., Signal, Telegram) have shown growing demand, and mainstream platforms are scrambling to meet it. By embedding secure chat and calls, X is broadening its value proposition beyond broadcasting posts and toward deeper user engagement and stickiness — voice calls, file sharing, and private groups create habitual use. Second, this aligns with Musk’s broader “everything app” ambition: the more functions you provide — texting, voice, video, payments, commerce — the more you keep users inside your ecosystem rather than bouncing between apps. If X can execute, it stands to challenge the dominance of legacy chat platforms in the West.

      Of course, execution is where the debates will play out. Early rollout seems limited to iOS and web; Android is promised “soon.” Moreover, security experts will evaluate how robust the encryption architecture really is, especially in group chats, multi-device sync and future expansions. For people who care deeply about privacy, the exposed metadata and admitted absence of protection against some attack vectors may be deal-breakers. Meanwhile, from a business/fiscal angle, X’s potential to monetise this new layer (say, via subscriptions, premium security features, or even payments) presents a monetisation path that goes beyond advertising.

      For users — and particularly content creators, podcasters, public figures, or platforms like yours in digital media — the key question will be trust and utility: does Chat deliver usable, secure private interactions in a trustworthy way, and will users migrate more of their communication into the X ecosystem as a result? If yes, X may become more than just a social feed. If not, the feature might remain a novelty rather than a foundational shift.

      At the end of the day, X’s Chat rollout is a bold move into a crowded space. Its success will depend less on the marketing of encryption and new functions and more on whether users experience reliability, security, intuitive design and genuine assurance that their private conversations remain private. The conservative user will ask: show the guarantees, exhibit the audits, prove the protections — because encryption without integrity and transparency is only half the promise.

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