X, the social platform owned by Elon Musk, is sharpening its legal and contractual posture around one of the most recognizable names in social media: Twitter. The company has updated its Terms of Service to explicitly state that users have no rights to use either the X name or the Twitter name—language that previously referenced only X—while also filing a countersuit aimed at reaffirming its ownership of the Twitter-related marks.
The changes arrive after a Virginia-based startup called Operation Bluebird filed a trademark application and related petition arguing that X effectively abandoned the Twitter brand when it rebranded the service to X. The dispute underscores how valuable legacy brand assets can remain—even after a high-profile name change—and how aggressively platform operators may defend them.
Why X is updating its Terms of Service now
According to reporting by TechCrunch, X’s revised Terms of Service will take effect on January 15, 2026. The key addition is a clear prohibition against using not only the X brand features but also the Twitter ones without written permission.
The updated clause states that nothing in the terms grants a right to use the X name or Twitter name or any of the company’s trademarks, logos, domain names, or other distinctive brand features. The notable shift is that “Twitter” is now named explicitly, closing a gap that could be cited by challengers as evidence that the company no longer treats the Twitter marks as active property.
While terms updates are routine at major platforms, this one reads like a deliberate reinforcement of X’s position in an escalating trademark fight. Contract language cannot replace trademark rights on its own, but it can help support a broader narrative: that the company continues to assert control over the marks and intends to prevent unauthorized use.
The countersuit: X says it still owns Twitter, Tweet, and the bluebird
X’s countersuit seeks to rebut Operation Bluebird’s core claim—abandonment—by stating that X continues to exclusively own the Twitter and Tweet trademarks as well as the bluebird logo. A copy of the filing was shared with TechCrunch by Gerben IP, a trademark law firm, and was not yet visible in PACER at the time of publication, TechCrunch reported.
In U.S. trademark law, “abandonment” generally requires non-use plus intent not to resume use. That makes public statements, product behavior, and ongoing brand references potentially relevant. Operation Bluebird’s petition reportedly pointed to a July 23, 2023 post from Musk indicating the platform would soon “bid adieu” to the Twitter brand—language that challengers could argue shows intent to move on permanently.
X’s response suggests it is unwilling to let that narrative stand unchallenged, especially if the result could be another entity holding a name that remains deeply associated with the platform in public discourse, search behavior, and historical media coverage.
Who is Operation Bluebird—and what it’s doing with Twitter.new
Operation Bluebird has positioned itself as a would-be new entrant in social networking, and it has been collecting potential user sign-ups through a website called Twitter.new. The effort is reportedly led by two lawyers: founder Michael Peroff (based in Illinois) and Stephen Coates, who previously worked as a trademark lawyer at Twitter.
That background is part of what makes the situation unusual. A team with trademark expertise can craft a challenge calibrated to the standards the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office considers in abandonment disputes. At the same time, the presence of trademark specialists at the helm has fueled speculation that the project’s primary objective may not be building a rival platform, but rather acquiring a valuable mark that could be monetized through licensing, settlement, or sale.
Regardless of the challenger’s endgame, the filing appears to have triggered a swift defensive response from X, which is treating the risk as real and immediate.
More updates: EU references and age assurance language
The revised terms and policies reportedly include additional changes beyond the trademark clause. TechCrunch noted references related to EU laws and generated content, as well as updates to X’s Privacy Policy that include mentions of age assurance technology.
These additions reflect the broader compliance environment confronting global platforms, particularly as European regulators increase scrutiny of content governance, transparency, and protections for minors. Even if the trademark dispute is the headline, the policy edits suggest X is also aligning documentation to meet evolving regulatory expectations and product realities.
What the fight means for the X brand—and for users
For X, protecting the Twitter marks is not only a legal issue but a strategic one. Even after the rebrand, “Twitter” remains a dominant keyword in everyday language, media references, and user search queries. That residual brand equity can translate into traffic, trust signals, and commercial value—especially in advertising and partnerships where recognition matters.
For users and developers, the updated terms serve as a warning that using Twitter-era branding—logos, names, and related identifiers—could invite enforcement. While many people still refer to posts as “tweets” colloquially, X’s position is that the underlying marks remain proprietary and not available for third-party use without permission.
The dispute will likely hinge on whether X can demonstrate continued use and intent to maintain rights in the Twitter marks despite the platform’s public-facing shift to X. With a countersuit filed and contractual language tightened, the company is signaling it plans to keep the old bird’s name firmly in its legal nest.

