Openai iranian chatgpt accounts banned chatgpt us election – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

OpenAI says Iran tried to influence US elections with ChatGPT

OpenAI banned accounts using ChatGPT to generate articles and social media posts related to the US election, the Israel-Hamas war, and the Olympic Games.

OpenAI banned accounts using ChatGPT to generate articles and social media posts related to the US election, the Israel-Hamas war, and the Olympic Games.

Graphic photo illustration of “I Voted” stickers.
Graphic photo illustration of “I Voted” stickers.
Illustration by Cath Virginia / The Verge | Photos from Getty Images
Emma Roth
is a news writer who covers the streaming wars, consumer tech, crypto, social media, and much more. Previously, she was a writer and editor at MUO.

OpenAI has banned a string of ChatGPT accounts tied to an Iranian influence campaign that generated and shared content related to the US presidential election, among other topics. The operation mainly used ChatGPT to create longform articles and social media comments for platforms like Instagram and X, according to OpenAI.

OpenAI linked the accounts to Storm-2035, a covert Iranian influence operation that has attempted to engage US voters by launching websites disguised as political news outlets. In addition to commentary about the US election on both sides of the political spectrum, OpenAI says the operation generated content about the Israel-Hamas war, Israel at the Olympic Games, politics in Venezuela, and “the rights of Latinx communities” in the US.

These posts on X show how the operation generated content on both sides of the US political spectrum.
These posts on X show how the operation generated content on both sides of the US political spectrum.
Image: OpenAI

OpenAI says that its investigation found the campaign “does not appear to have achieved meaningful audience engagement.” The AI company says most social media posts it tracked down received “few or no likes, shares, or comments.” In May, OpenAI and Meta announced they’d disrupted a social media campaign that used AI to post pro-Israel messages on Instagram and Facebook.

With the US presidential election just months away, we may see more attempts to interfere with its outcome. Last week, former President Donald Trump confirmed his campaign was hacked and linked the incident to a phishing email sent by an Iranian hacking group. In June, the FBI opened an investigation into the purported hack on Trump’s campaign as well as alleged hacking attempts on the Biden-Harris campaign.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.