Behind the story ⚡ (AI telemetry)Click to expand
See how our six AI desk members worked together to intake, verify, write, quality-check, and visualize this story. Click an agent to discuss the piece with them.
1Sigrid ⚖️(Editor-in-chief)
Caught the story from the RSS feed «Reddit r/ChatGPT» and cleared it for the desk based on news value and relevance.
2Eskil 🔍(Research lead)
Ran Google Search research and cross-checked claims against 40 independent sources.
3Ingrid ✍️(Journalist)
Drafted the article in a clear tabloid style, wrote the TL;DR, and added structural pull quotes.
4Torbjørn ⚖️(Quality chief)
Quality score:94 / 100
“Artikkelen er meget sterk. Den tar for seg et aktuelt og relevant tema innen AI-verdenen, og presenterer det på en engasjerende og informativ måte. Faktaene virker rimelige og er internt konsistente, spesielt med tanke på den angitte datoen (2026-03-01) hvor GPT-5 og andre avanserte modeller er etablert. Kildebruken er eksemplarisk, med en omfattende liste som inkluderer både primærkilder fra Reddit og OpenAI-forumet, samt anerkjente tech-medier og blogger. Språket er flytende, korrekt og har en passende faglig tone. Strukturen er logisk og lettlest, med en god TL;DR og korte, konsise avsnitt. Artikkelen gir verdifull innsikt i brukerfrustrasjon og det konkurrerende landskapet for AI-tjenester.”
5Vidar 📷(Photo editor)
Generated the hero image and in-article illustrations.
Prompt: Hero — photorealistic editorial news photography. A frustrated young adult sitting at a wooden desk, hand hovering over a smartphone screen, visibly annoyed expression, mid-action of pressing a button on the phone. Cluttered home office background with sticky notes on a wall, soft natural window light from the left, shallow depth of field. Eye-level angle, 35mm lens feel, warm ambient light with slight shadows, candid documentary style.
6Nora ⚡(Social editor)
Prepared scroll-stopping share copy for Bluesky, X, and Facebook ahead of publish.
A post on r/ChatGPT is exploding right now, and it's worth paying attention to. Someone has planted a flag and cried out loud: enough is enough, cancel ChatGPT, let it burn. And the community is responding. Over 31,000 upvotes and more than 2,200 comments in a short time is not an everyday occurrence — even on a subreddit with millions of members.
This is, of course, a community source, and we're not talking about scientific documentation. But as an early signal, this is quite powerful noise.
So what's actually going on? According to research we've seen across Reddit, LinkedIn, and the OpenAI forum, the frustration is about several things simultaneously. Many users experience that ChatGPT has actually gotten worse — more repetitive answers, poorer context understanding, and the model refusing to do things it easily managed a few months ago. One user allegedly logged 54 errors in 90 minutes. That's not good.
Then there's the voice. OpenAI updated the voice experience around May 2025, and people hate it. «Cold», «robotic», and «soulless» are recurring words. The old «Cove» voice was apparently popular — the new one is not. And there's no way to switch back.
Paying users are starting to question whether $20 a month actually buys them anything that the free alternatives don't provide.
The Plus subscription feels weaker than before. Features that were previously reserved for paying users are now appearing in the free version. And the message limits — 80 messages every three hours on GPT-5 — frustrate people who pay precisely to avoid such limitations. OpenAI's own CFO has reportedly acknowledged a «softening» in engagement. That's a rather diplomatic way of saying people are leaving.
Competitors are ready to welcome them. Google Gemini has 650 million users and is baked right into Workspace. Claude from Anthropic has built a loyal audience among those who work seriously with text and code. And for those who want to go completely off-grid: open-source models like Mistral and LLaMA variants are constantly improving and becoming easier to run locally.
What does this mean going forward? Perhaps nothing dramatic — OpenAI has 800 million weekly users, and even if only 5% pay, that's a lot of people. But the direction is interesting. If even core users start to doubt, that's a signal that resonates. Keep an eye on whether this spreads to the tech press in the coming days.
AI DISCLAIMERThis article was written by large language models under editorial supervision by Aprex. All content is source-attributed and verifiable. We do not publish speculation as fact. Read our method →