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Home - AI - OpenAI ChatGPT Issues Code Red as Google Gemini and Grok Catch Up Fast

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OpenAI ChatGPT Issues Code Red as Google Gemini and Grok Catch Up Fast

Thanawat "Tan" Chaiyaporn
Last updated: December 3, 2025 8:38 am
Thanawat Chaiyaporn
12 seconds ago
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OpenAI ChatGPT Issues Code Red
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SAN FRANCISCO – Sources inside OpenAI say CEO Sam Altman has called a company-wide “Code Red”, an emergency status usually kept for threats that could change the firm’s future. The spark for this shift is a rapid surge from Google DeepMind’s Gemini programme and xAI’s Grok models, which several OpenAI researchers now fear could wipe out ChatGPT’s advantage within 6 to 9 months.

According to three current staff members, who asked to remain anonymous, Altman led an all-hands meeting last Wednesday where he spoke more bluntly than usual. He told employees, “We are no longer clearly ahead. If we don’t move faster than we ever have, we will be in serious trouble.”

One internal slide reportedly framed the moment as “Sputnik 2.0”, a nod to the 1957 Soviet satellite that jolted the United States into the space race. As part of the Code Red order, non-essential projects have been cancelled, most hiring has paused apart from top-tier researchers, and dozens of engineers have been pulled off long-term alignment work and reassigned to near-term product upgrades and scaling.

Gemini’s Frightening Jump Forward

The biggest shock inside OpenAI comes from Google’s Gemini Ultra 2.5 model, known internally as “Orion”. Recent benchmark results leaked from Google show Gemini matching or beating GPT-4o in LMSYS Arena blind tests for the first time.

It appears especially strong in multimodal reasoning, very long-context work (up to 2 million tokens), and real-time video understanding.

What worries OpenAI even more is distribution. Gemini now plugs directly into Gmail, Docs, YouTube, and Search, with almost no friction for users. That reach is something ChatGPT still lacks.

“Gemini isn’t just a model anymore, it’s the system layer for around 3 billion people,” one former OpenAI researcher said. “We have a chatbot. They have the entire internet as their interface.”

Grok: The Dark Horse That Broke Through

At the same time, Elon Musk’s xAI has turned Grok-3, quietly released in November, into a serious rival. The model is trained on the full X (Twitter) firehose and Tesla’s massive telemetry streams. As a result, Grok now tops every public reasoning benchmark, especially in physics-style simulation, real-time data analysis, and what people inside xAI call “vibe-native” cultural awareness.

Its uncensored, blunt, and highly opinionated style has driven fast organic growth. Grok is said to have reached around 150 million monthly active users in under a month, far outpacing paid ChatGPT sign-ups.

Pricing adds extra pressure. ChatGPT Plus still costs 20 dollars per month, and the upcoming GPT-5 tier is rumoured to start at over 200 dollars per month for advanced reasoning access. Grok-3, by contrast, is bundled with X Premium at 8 dollars per month, and Grok-4 comes with Premium+ at 16 dollars per month.

xAI’s Colossus supercomputing cluster in Memphis, now at roughly 200,000 H100-equivalent chips and growing, gives Musk a clear lead in raw compute for the first time.

Trouble in the OpenAI Boardroom

This Code Red moment lands almost exactly two years after Altman’s dramatic firing and rapid reinstatement in November 2023. Some board members who fought for his return are now quietly asking whether OpenAI’s mixed for-profit and non-profit structure is slowing the company down.

Microsoft, which has put around 13 billion dollars into OpenAI and relies on Azure demand from its models, is described as “extremely concerned” about losing cloud customers to Google TPUs or xAI’s in-house infrastructure.

OpenAI is speeding up work on GPT-5 and pushing to release it “as fast as humanly possible”. Internal targets now point to a limited launch before March 2026. Early internal briefs suggest GPT-5 will offer a native 10-million-token context window, real-time voice and video, and a new “reasoning engine” that is claimed to outperform every rival by a clear margin.

Even so, many inside the company admit the gap has shrunk far more quickly than they expected.

One senior engineer put it bluntly: “Six months ago we thought we had a two-year lead. Today it feels like a three-way knife fight in a phone booth.”

For the first time since ChatGPT took off in late 2022, OpenAI no longer looks like the hunter. It looks like the hunted. And Sam Altman has just slammed his hand on the panic button.

TAGGED:AI chatbot market share Grok GeminiAI model MMLU scoresChatGPT rivals performanceGemini and Grok catching up to ChatGPTGemini Grok ChatGPT benchmarksGenerative AI model comparisonGoogle Gemini vs Grok vs ChatGPTLarge Language Model performance comparisonLatest LLM leaderboardLLM competition closing the gap
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Thanawat "Tan" Chaiyaporn
ByThanawat Chaiyaporn
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Thanawat "Tan" Chaiyaporn is a dynamic journalist specializing in artificial intelligence (AI), robotics, and their transformative impact on local industries. As the Technology Correspondent for the Chiang Rai Times, he delivers incisive coverage on how emerging technologies spotlight AI tech and innovations.
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