X now offers an MCP server to make its platform easier for AI tools to use
X has launched a hosted MCP server, making it easier for developers to connect AI applications with the company's API. X is making it easier for AI assistants like Claude, Cursor, Grok Build, and other MCP-compatible apps to connect directly to the platform through a new hosted MCP server. On Monday, the Elon Musk-owned social network unveiled a hosted Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that lets AI tools communicate with the X API using a user's own account permissions.
Key Takeaways
- MCP, for context, is an open standard that defines a common way for AI models to connect to external tools and services.
Previously, if developers wanted an AI assistant like Claude or Cursor to access X, they would have to build their own MCP server, host it, connect to the X API, and handle the authentication.
- Developers have long been able to search X, read posts, look up users, analyze conversations and trends, and do more using the platform's API.
The hosted MCP doesn't add new capabilities on that front; it just makes them easier to expose to AI applications.
- It's worth noting that the hosted MCP isn't bypassing X's API rules, which continue to restrict its use if the company detects spammy behavior.
X also updated its API v2 earlier this year to address the issue of AI-generated spam, particularly programmatic replies to conversations.
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MCP, for context, is an open standard that defines a common way for AI models to connect to external tools and services. Previously, if developers wanted an AI assistant like Claude or Cursor to access X, they would have to build their own MCP server, host it, connect to the X API, and handle the authentication. Now, X hosts the MCP, and users authenticate with their own X account's permissions.
This allows developers to save the time spent on integration work to focus on whatever it is they're actually building. Developers have long been able to search X, read posts, look up users, analyze conversations and trends, and do more using the platform's API. The hosted MCP doesn't add new capabilities on that front; it just makes them easier to expose to AI applications.
By doing so, X can position itself as an information network filled with real-time data to retrieve and analyze, rather than just a social hangout. The move sees X joining a growing number of companies that now offer their own official MCP servers or endpoints, like GitHub , Slack , Notion , Stripe , and Salesforce . Of course, there's always concern that by removing an infrastructure hurdle, X is opening itself up to more automated posting or spam.
For more details please read the original article at TechCrunch AI.
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