
ETH’s market structure and fractal analysis from 2021 and 2024 provide insights where significant buy demand may exist. Currently, it’s on the downside.


ETH’s market structure and fractal analysis from 2021 and 2024 provide insights where significant buy demand may exist. Currently, it’s on the downside.
In September, Alfred Stephen, a freelance software developer in Singapore, purchased a ChatGPT Plus subscription, which costs $20 a month and offers more access to advanced models, to speed up his work. But he grew frustrated with the chatbot’s coding abilities and its gushing, meandering replies. Then he came across a post on Reddit about a campaign called QuitGPT.
The campaign urged ChatGPT users to cancel their subscriptions, flagging a substantial contribution by OpenAI president Greg Brockman to President Donald Trump’s super PAC MAGA Inc. It also pointed out that the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, uses a résumé screening tool powered by ChatGPT-4. The federal agency has become a political flashpoint since its agents fatally shot two people in Minneapolis in January.
For Stephen, who had already been tinkering with other chatbots, learning about Brockman’s donation was the final straw. “That’s really the straw that broke the camel’s back,” he says. When he canceled his ChatGPT subscription, a survey popped up asking what OpenAI could have done to keep his subscription. “Don’t support the fascist regime,” he wrote.
QuitGPT is one of the latest salvos in a growing movement by activists and disaffected users to cancel their subscriptions. In just the past few weeks, users have flooded Reddit with stories about quitting the chatbot. Many lamented the performance of GPT-5.2, the latest model. Others shared memes parodying the chatbot’s sycophancy. Some planned a “Mass Cancellation Party” in San Francisco, a sardonic nod to the GPT-4o funeral that an OpenAI employee had floated, poking fun at users who are mourning the model’s impending retirement. Still, others are protesting against what they see as a deepening entanglement between OpenAI and the Trump administration.
OpenAI did not respond to a request for comment.
As of December 2025, ChatGPT had nearly 900 million weekly active users, according to The Information. While it’s unclear how many users have joined the boycott, QuitGPT is getting attention. A recent Instagram post from the campaign has more than 36 million views and 1.3 million likes. And the organizers say that more than 17,000 people have signed up on the campaign’s website, which asks people whether they canceled their subscriptions, will commit to stop using ChatGPT, or will share the campaign on social media.
“There are lots of examples of failed campaigns like this, but we have seen a lot of effectiveness,” says Dana Fisher, a sociologist at American University. A wave of canceled subscriptions rarely sways a company’s behavior, unless it reaches a critical mass, she says. “The place where there’s a pressure point that might work is where the consumer behavior is if enough people actually use their … money to express their political opinions.”
MIT Technology Review reached out to three employees at OpenAI, none of whom said they were familiar with the campaign.
Dozens of left-leaning teens and twentysomethings scattered across the US came together to organize QuitGPT in late January. They range from pro-democracy activists and climate organizers to techies and self-proclaimed cyber libertarians, many of them seasoned grassroots campaigners. They were inspired by a viral video posted by Scott Galloway, a marketing professor at New York University and host of The Prof G Pod. He argued that the best way to stop ICE was to persuade people to cancel their ChatGPT subscriptions. Denting OpenAI’s subscriber base could ripple through the stock market and threaten an economic downturn that would nudge Trump, he said.
“We make a big enough stink for OpenAI that all of the companies in the whole AI industry have to think about whether they’re going to get away enabling Trump and ICE and authoritarianism,” says an organizer of QuitGPT who requested anonymity because he feared retaliation by OpenAI, citing the company’s recent subpoenas against advocates at nonprofits. OpenAI made for an obvious first target of the movement, he says, but “this is about so much more than just OpenAI.”
Simon Rosenblum-Larson, a labor organizer in Madison, Wisconsin, who organizes movements to regulate the development of data centers, joined the campaign after hearing about it through Signal chats among community activists. “The goal here is to pull away the support pillars of the Trump administration. They’re reliant on many of these tech billionaires for support and for resources,” he says.
QuitGPT’s website points to new campaign finance reports showing that Greg Brockman and his wife each donated $12.5 million to MAGA Inc., making up nearly a quarter of the roughly $102 million it raised over the second half of 2025. The information that ICE uses a résumé screening tool powered by ChatGPT-4 came from an AI inventory published by the Department of Homeland Security in January.
QuitGPT is in the mold of Galloway’s own recently launched campaign, Resist and Unsubscribe. The movement urges consumers to cancel their subscriptions to Big Tech platforms, including ChatGPT, for the month of February, as a protest to companies “driving the markets and enabling our president.”
“A lot of people are feeling real anxiety,” Galloway told MIT Technology Review. “You take enabling a president, proximity to the president, and an unease around AI,” he says, “and now people are starting to take action with their wallets.” Galloway says his campaign’s website can draw more than 200,000 unique visits in a day and that he receives dozens of DMs every hour showing screenshots of canceled subscriptions.
The consumer boycotts follow a growing wave of pressure from inside the companies themselves. In recent weeks, tech workers have been urging their employers to use their political clout to demand that ICE leave US cities, cancel company contracts with the agency, and speak out against the agency’s actions. CEOs have started responding. OpenAI’s Sam Altman wrote in an internal Slack message to employees that ICE is “going too far.” Apple CEO Tim Cook called for a “deescalation” in an internal memo posted on the company’s website for employees. It was a departure from how Big Tech CEOs have courted President Trump with dinners and donations since his inauguration.
Although spurred by a fatal immigration crackdown, these developments signal that a sprawling anti-AI movement is gaining momentum. The campaigns are tapping into simmering anxieties about AI, says Rosenblum-Larson, including the energy costs of data centers, the plague of deepfake porn, the teen mental-health crisis, the job apocalypse, and slop. “It’s a really strange set of coalitions built around the AI movement,” he says.
“Those are the right conditions for a movement to spring up,” says David Karpf, a professor of media and public affairs at George Washington University. Brockman’s donation to Trump’s super PAC caught many users off guard, he says. “In the longer arc, we are going to see users respond and react to Big Tech, deciding that they’re not okay with this.”
This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology.
A first look at Making AI Work, MIT Technology Review’s new AI newsletter
Are you interested in learning more about the ways in which AI is actually being used? We’ve launched a new weekly newsletter series exploring just that: digging into how generative AI is being used and deployed across sectors and what professionals need to know to apply it in their everyday work.
Each edition of Making AI Work begins with a case study, examining a specific use case of AI in a given industry. Then we’ll take a deeper look at the AI tool being used, with more context about how other companies or sectors are employing that same tool or system. Finally, we’ll end with action-oriented tips to help you apply the tool.
The first edition takes a look at how AI is changing health care, digging into the future of medical note-taking by learning about the Microsoft Copilot tool used by doctors at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Sign up here to receive the seven editions straight to your inbox, and if you’d like to read more about AI’s impact on health care in the meantime, check out some of our past reporting:
+ This medical startup uses LLMs to run appointments and make diagnoses.
+ How AI is changing how we quantify pain by helping health-care providers better assess their patients’ discomfort. Read the full story.
+ End-of-life decisions are difficult and distressing. Could AI help?
+ Artificial intelligence is infiltrating health care. But we shouldn’t let it make all the decisions unchecked. Read the full story.
Why the Moltbook frenzy was like Pokémon
Lots of influential people in tech recently described Moltbook, an online hangout populated by AI agents interacting with one another, as a glimpse into the future. It appeared to show AI systems doing useful things for the humans that created them—sure, it was flooded with crypto scams, and many of the posts were actually written by people, but something about it pointed to a future of helpful AI, right?
The whole experiment reminded our senior editor for AI, Will Douglas Heaven, of something far less interesting: Pokémon. Read the full story to find out why.
—James O’Donnell
This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first, sign up here.
The must-reads
I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 OpenAI has begun testing ads in ChatGPT
But the ads won’t influence the responses it provides, apparently. (The Verge)
+ Users who pay at least $20 a month for the chatbot will be exempt. (Gizmodo)
+ So will users believed to be under 18. (Axios)
2 The White House has a plan to stop data centers from raising electricity prices
It’s going to ask AI companies to voluntarily commit to keeping costs down. (Politico)
+ The US federal government is adopting AI left, right and center. (WP $)
+ We did the math on AI’s energy footprint. Here’s the story you haven’t heard. (MIT Technology Review)
3 Elon Musk wants to colonize the moon
For now at least, his grand ambitions to live on Mars are taking a backseat. (CNN)
+ His full rationale for this U-turn isn’t exactly clear. (Ars Technica)
+ Musk also wants to become the first to launch a working data center in space. (FT $)
+ The case against humans in space. (MIT Technology Review)
4 Cheap AI tools are helping criminals to ramp up their scams
They’re using LLMs to massively scale up their attacks. (Bloomberg $)
+ Cyberattacks by AI agents are coming. (MIT Technology Review)
5 Iceland could be heading towards becoming one giant glacier
If human-driven warming disrupts a vital ocean current, that is. (WP $)
+ Inside a new quest to save the “doomsday glacier.” (MIT Technology Review)
6 Amazon is planning to launch an AI content marketplace
It’s reported to have spoken to media publishers to gauge their interest. (The Information $)
7 Doctors can’t agree on how to diagnose Alzheimer’s
They worry that some patients are being misdiagnosed. (WSJ $)
8 The first wave of AI enthusiasts are burning out
A new study has found that AI tools are linked to employees working more, not less. (TechCrunch)
9 We’re finally moving towards better ways to measure body fat
BMI is a flawed metric. Physicians are finally using better measures. (New Scientist $)
+ These are the best ways to measure your body fat. (MIT Technology Review)
10 It’s getting harder to become a social media megastar
Maybe that’s a good thing? (Insider $)
+ The likes of Mr Beast are still raking in serious cash, though. (The Information $)
Quote of the day
“This case is as easy as ABC—addicting, brains, children.”
—Lawyer Mark Lanier lays out his case during the opening statements of a new tech addiction trial in which a woman has accused Meta of deliberately designing their platforms to be addictive, the New York Times reports.
One more thing

China wants to restore the sea with high-tech marine ranches
A short ferry ride from the port city of Yantai, on the northeast coast of China, sits Genghai No. 1, a 12,000-metric-ton ring of oil-rig-style steel platforms, advertised as a hotel and entertainment complex.
Genghai is in fact an unusual tourist destination, one that breeds 200,000 “high-quality marine fish” each year. The vast majority are released into the ocean as part of a process known as marine ranching.
The Chinese government sees this work as an urgent and necessary response to the bleak reality that fisheries are collapsing both in China and worldwide. But just how much of a difference can it make? Read the full story.
—Matthew Ponsford
We can still have nice things
A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet ’em at me.)
+ Wow, Joel and Ethan Coen’s dark comedic classic Fargo is 30 years old.
+ A new exhibition in New York is rightfully paying tribute to one of the greatest technological inventions: the Walkman ($)
+ This gigantic sleeping dachshund sculpture in South Korea is completely bonkers.
+ A beautiful heart-shaped pendant linked to King Henry VIII has been secured by the British Museum.
Are you copying and pasting prompts from the internet only to get mediocre results? Do you feel like AI tools are powerful but you’re not getting the consistent outputs you need? In this article, you’ll discover a strategic framework for getting reliable results from AI models. You’ll learn why most prompting advice fails, how to […]
The post Rethinking Prompting: Getting AI to Work for You appeared first on Social Media Examiner.
Bluesky’s growth has slowed, but it is seeing some growth early in the new year.