China-based operatives used ChatGPT to shape AI data centers and tariff debates
Axios
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OpenAI has banned China-linked accounts that https://www.axios.com/2026/02/25/openai-chatgpt-china-japan-prime-minister" target="_blank">used ChatGPT to draft social media influence campaigns targeting U.S. debates over tariffs and AI data centers, the company said Wednesday.
Why it matters: The campaigns don't appear to have been effective, but they show how pro-China actors are testing AI tools to amplify existing political and economic divisions in the U.S.
Driving the news: OpenAI said it uncovered two operations that used ChatGPT to generate posts, comments and political cartoons about U.S. tech policy.
- One campaign, dubbed "Data Center Bandwagon," generated comments and comics claiming AI data centers were driving up electricity prices for American families.
- A second operation, "Tech and Tariffs," used ChatGPT to create content and political cartoons criticizing Trump's tariffs and the U.S. push for global tech dominance.
The big picture: Both campaigns latched onto already-heated debates.
- A recent Harvard/MIT https://www.axios.com/2026/04/03/data-centers-concerns-ai-electricity-harvard-mit" target="_blank">poll found 32% of Americans oppose data centers in their area, while 40% support them.
- Seven in 10 Americans said in a Harris poll https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/13/trump-tariffs-poll" target="_blank">released in March that Trump's tariffs have caused them to pay higher prices.
- "This was not a case of an influence operation creating a debate," Ben Nimmo, principal investigator on OpenAI's intelligence and investigations team, told reporters. "The debate existed already.
This was an influence operation from China trying to interfere in it."
Reality check: OpenAI said the campaigns failed to gain much online traction.
- However, an OpenAI official told reporters that this appears to be the first time the company has seen a China-linked operation using its models to meddle in the AI data center debate.
Zoom in: In the data center campaign, users OpenAI believes were linked to a Chinese government contractor asked ChatGPT to create comic strips about power grid capacity and electricity prices.
- The images were later posted to X via likely inauthentic accounts, alongside links to legitimate news stories about data center power demand.
- A separate group, which OpenAI could not directly attribute, used ChatGPT to create political cartoons of President Trump that criticized U.S. tech and tariff policies.
- In one cartoon, Trump is depicted wearing American flag pants that say "America First" while holding a mallet with the words "Tech Dominance" on them and swinging it into a wall that reads "Global Future."
The bottom line: OpenAI says the campaigns are an early sign of how foreign influence operators may use AI tools to scale content around U.S. political flashpoints.
Go deeper: https://www.axios.com/2025/08/22/ai-disinformation-china-golaxy-vanderbilt" target="_blank">Foreign disinformation enters AI-powered era