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Home » What you should know about the Cancel ChatGPT trend and whether it crossed a red line
Technology

What you should know about the Cancel ChatGPT trend and whether it crossed a red line

By dailyguardian.aeMarch 2, 20263 Mins Read
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A new online movement calling for users to cancel ChatGPT subscriptions has quickly gone mainstream, and it all traces back to a controversial new partnership between OpenAI and the U.S. Department of Defence. The deal allows OpenAI’s models to be deployed inside classified government networks, a move that has sparked backlash across social media and tech communities.

Tonight, we reached an agreement with the Department of War to deploy our models in their classified network.

In all of our interactions, the DoW displayed a deep respect for safety and a desire to partner to achieve the best possible outcome.

AI safety and wide distribution of…

— Sam Altman (@sama) February 28, 2026

The controversy intensified when rival AI company Anthropic refused to accept similar terms from the Pentagon, citing concerns about mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. The company risked losing a major government contract rather than loosen its safeguards, drawing praise from critics of military AI.

That contrast quickly fueled the “Cancel ChatGPT” trend. Some users say they are cancelling subscriptions in protest, accusing OpenAI of compromising ethical principles by working with the military.

The real debate is about military AI, not just one company

The backlash is not simply about one contract. It reflects a broader and growing tension around how AI should be used in defence, intelligence, and surveillance. OpenAI says its Pentagon deal includes safeguards that ban domestic mass surveillance, autonomous weapons, and high-stakes automated decisions, with Sam Altman arguing that working with governments helps shape responsible AI use.

Sam Altman on stage with GPT-5 launch

Critics remain wary, however, noting that laws like the Patriot Act could allow surveillance programs to expand over time. The debate has also spread inside the tech industry itself. As reported by Axios, more than 200 employees from Google and OpenAI signed an open letter urging stronger limits on military AI use, showing how divided even AI workers are on the issue.

OpenAI just signed with the Pentagon.

Anthropic said NO.

OpenAI said YES.

Now #CancelChatGPT is trending and Claude hit #1 on the App Store.

The market votes with its feet.

Principles > Profit

— The Growth Engine (@allenxmarketing) March 1, 2026

For everyday users, this moment marks a turning point in how AI companies are viewed, as ethical concerns shift from abstract debates to real-world government partnerships and national security. Whether the “Cancel ChatGPT” movement lasts or fades, the conversation around AI is clearly changing from what these tools can do to where their boundaries should be.

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