Like many brands, a lot of artists stopped using the former Twitter in the great X exodus a couple of years ago. Elon Musk‘s chaotic rebranding of the platform along with a rise in AI bots and a proliferation of conspiracy theories and hate speech caused many to seek Twitter alternatives.

Some chose to hang on, but perhaps not for much longer after Elon Musk announced a dubious Christmas present for the X community. The platform has rolled out a controversial new feature that allows users to edit any image on the platform using AI, and artists are understandably furious.

December 26, 2025

What is this sh*t? They straight up added new feature and anyone can just edit your image, you posted, using GenAi.So far it seems like there is no way turning it off. pic.twitter.com/ln3isCyKl6December 24, 2025

DON’T POST ANY IRL IMAGES FOR YOUR OWN SAFETY! Twitter implemented a new update that everyone can edit any uploaded image through AI! From what is known until now, you can’t disable this option! Please, for your own safety, I repeat: Do not share your IRL pics on Twitter and… pic.twitter.com/6cEZ8XnQyBDecember 24, 2025

This doesn’t just put artists at risk, it puts every Twitter user at risk. Anyone can use AI to edit images of real people posted on this platform, simply a family photo, PAST OR PRESENT. Why is this enabled by default without any consent of the people who shared those images? pic.twitter.com/yb2iz2o3E9December 24, 2025

X has added a Grok-powered AI image editor that lets anyone edit any image on X. There’s no opt-out/consent, raising concerns over unauthorized edits & misuse.So I can/will no longer post any images on X. This incl cartoons & the daily German word. Pls, find them on BlueSky. 🙏 pic.twitter.com/N5QFGAeF2sDecember 25, 2025

So there is there anything that can be done? Tools like Nightshade and Glaze were developed to protect digital art from AI training, but they do nothing to prevent AI editing.

Some people are recommending turning of AI permissions in X at Settings > Privacy > Grok & Third-Party Collaborators, but none of these specifically refer to AI image editing. According to Grok itself, there’s no way to disable the new feature.

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Others have suggested that one way to upload images without them being editable is to save them as GIFs instead of JPGs, although this involves a loss of image quality.

Big businesses could turn out to be on artists’ side. Considering how companies and groups like The Motion Picture Association opposed OpenAI’s Sora app, it seems likely that many will be concerned about the feature. Disney recently demanded that Google stop Gemini from reproducing its IPs after it announced a deal with OpenAI.

Someone cynical might even suggest that X chose to launch the feature during the holiday period to give it a few days to see how people use it before the cease-and-desist letters start to arrive.

What do you think? Will you continue to use X or move to AI-free platforms like Cara?