Elon Musk on Messaging Platform X Chat’s Features and Bitcoin-Like P2P Encryption
The in-app Chat is in beta for Premium users with file sharing and media support, while a standalone X Chat app is slated to follow in the coming months.
By Siamak Masnavi, AI Boost|Edited by Aoyon Ashraf
Nov 1, 2025, 12:01 p.m.

- X will keep Chat inside theX app, but also will ship a standalone X Chat in the coming months.
- Musk compared X Chat’s peer-to-peer (P2P) encryption approach to Bitcoin and said there are no advertising hooks.
- In-app Chat is in beta for Premium X users with text messaging, as well as file and media sharing; audio and video calls are planned.
Tesla and Space X CEO Elon Musk says X will ship a standalone “X Chat” in the coming months while keeping Chat embedded in X, adding that its peer-to-peer encryption approach is “similar to Bitcoin” and that the system avoids advertising hooks.
Speaking on Friday’s “Joe Rogan Experience,” Musk said X has “rebuilt the entire messaging stack” as X Chat and argued security should be viewed in “degrees of insecurity,” not as a binary. He described a peer-to-peer-style model and said the goal is to make Chat “the least insecure” among messaging apps. He added that encryption is “very good” and undergoing thorough testing.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Musk linked his security pitch to business design. He said rival messengers introduce risk when they include “hooks for advertising,” arguing that any pathway used to target ads could become an avenue to read messages if abused. He said X Chat will not include such hooks.
Distribution will be dual track. “We’ll have both,” Musk said, noting a dedicated app targeted “in a few months,” alongside the integrated experience inside X. In either version, users should be able to text, share files, and place audio or video calls once the full feature set lands.
The current status is more modest. Inside X today, Chat functions as an upgraded replacement for legacy direct messages and is in beta for Premium subscribers. The in-app Chat supports text, photos, media attachments, GIFs, and file sharing tied to X handles rather than phone numbers. Audio and video calling were cited by Musk as part of the plan but do not appear in the current version of X.
Musk’s framing centers on two ideas: keep content encrypted end to end and limit what the service must know by stripping out ad-targeting logic. Mainstream messengers often encrypt message content but retain metadata such as counterparties and timestamps; his view is that reducing reliance on advertising narrows the attack surface.
AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.
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