AI

“QuitGPT” Goes Viral as Users Call for Ditching ChatGPT Over Data Safety

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A grassroots movement dubbed “QuitGPT” has surged in popularity online as thousands of users publicly declare they are abandoning ChatGPT and similar AI chat tools, driven by concerns over privacy, data security, perceived bias and ethical issues tied to generative artificial intelligence.

QuitGPT has emerged as a loosely coordinated, decentralized campaign spreading across Reddit, Instagram and a network of dedicated websites, where users publicly commit to cancelling ChatGPT Plus and other paid subscriptions. What began as scattered online criticism has evolved into a more structured boycott, with participants framing their decision as both a personal choice and a collective statement about the direction of commercial AI.

At the center of the backlash are political and ethical concerns tied to OpenAI’s leadership. One widely circulated claim within the movement points to a major political donation by an OpenAI executive to a pro-Trump super PAC, an action critics say clashes with the social and political values held by many users in the tech community. While the donation itself is legal, campaign supporters argue it raises uncomfortable questions about alignment between corporate leadership and the expectations of a global user base.

Some QuitGPT participants are switching to alternative services that they perceive as more privacy-conscious or open-source, such as models that can run locally or without centralized data logging. Others use the movement to advocate for broader AI literacy and regulatory safeguards, arguing that AI adoption should be accompanied by strong user protections and ethical guardrails.

QuitGPT advocates have also scrutinized how government agencies deploy AI systems similar to ChatGPT in sensitive settings. They point specifically to reports showing these tools used in hiring, screening and enforcement workflows by agencies such as U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

In many ways, the ideas QuitGPT represents may matter more than the number of users who actually cancel their subscriptions. The movement reflects a broader shift in which the public is examining big tech companies more critically and questioning their power and accountability. However, ChatGPT still commands a massive free user base, and millions of professionals, students and everyday users have woven it into how they work, learn and think. That level of usefulness does not vanish overnight, even as criticism grows louder.

Abdul Wasay

Abdul Wasay explores emerging trends across AI, cybersecurity, startups and social media platforms in a way anyone can easily follow.