ChatGPT has been on a tear recently, adding apps that appear in the chat window, in-app shopping, and Spotify integration. OpenAI also launched ChatGPT Atlas, an AI-centric browser meant to compete against the Perplexity Comet and Opera Neon AI browsers that beat it to market.
All that branching off has distracted ChatGPT from focusing on its core mission, according to news of a memo, as reported in stories by The Wall Street Journal and The Information published on Tuesday, December 2, 2025.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has declared a “Code Red” that ChatGPT needs to re-focus its mission in the face of stiffened competition. But is ChatGPT’s situation really as dramatic as it sounds?
code red?
We’re all on the outside looking in. It’s obvious that we don’t have the deep look into the company that only those within OpenAI’s higher ranks do, but from what was reported about Altman’s memo, ChatGPT’s new direction comes down to focusing on its core chat functions rather than adding any new features in the near future.
The WSJ says their reporters have seen the internal memo circulated companywide within OpenAI, and that in it “Altman said OpenAI had more work to do on the day-to-day experience of its chatbot, including improving personalization features for users, increasing its speed and reliability, and allowing it to answer a wider range of questions.”
OpenAI isn’t profitable, but then a lot of wildly popular household names in Big Tech aren’t. Google, Anthropic, Perplexity, xAI, and even Meta are all other heavyweight companies investing in their generative AIs to eat up the same pie that ChatGPT wants to devour, and the increasing competition among them is ostensibly the reason for OpenAI doubling down on improving the core ChatGPT experience.
“With OpenAI committed to hundreds of billions of dollars in future data-center investments, concerns about its timeline for turning those investments into meaningful revenues have sent tremors through the stock market in recent weeks,” the WSJ says further.
All of it appears to be fairly run-of-the-mill. “Code Red” sounds like a data center is underwater or a critical error in the basic code has been discovered, not a recommitment to quality and core values.
Ramping up the dramatics gains you eyeballs, but the effect wears off by desensitizing a wary public before long.
The post OpenAI’s ‘Code Red’ About ChatGPT Sounds Pretty Mild, Actually appeared first on VICE.




