The AI assistant market just moved faster than most brands can react to. After Anthropic refused to let the Department of Defense use its models for mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons, President Trump ordered federal agencies to stop using Anthropic products, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said he planned to label the company a "supply-chain threat." Hours later OpenAI announced its own Pentagon deal. The ethics debate that followed sent users to Claude in record numbers: it climbed to #1 on the App Store, posted record daily signups, grew free users by 60% since January, and more than doubled paid subscribers this year. TechCrunch even published a guide on switching from ChatGPT to Claude without losing your history.
Whatever you think of the politics, the market lesson is blunt. Assistant loyalty is thin, and a single news cycle can redistribute where hundreds of millions of people ask their questions — including the questions that used to be searches about your brand.
Key takeaways
- A brand and ethics controversy, not a product launch, drove the swing: Claude reached #1 on the App Store with free users up 60% since January and paid subscribers more than doubling this year. - User share between AI assistants is volatile and can move within days, so treating any one engine as "the" place your customers live is a planning error. - Where users go, their shopping and discovery queries go with them — a migration from ChatGPT to Claude quietly redistributes which engine decides how your brand shows up. - For GEO teams the takeaway is direct: monitor your visibility across every major engine, because being strong on the leader today is no insurance when the leader changes next quarter. - Switching cost for users is now low (import history, keep your workflow), which means these swings will get more frequent, not less.
A political fight became a market event
The catalyst here had nothing to do with model quality. Anthropic drew a line on how the Pentagon could use its models — no mass domestic surveillance, no fully autonomous weapons — and the fallout was immediate: a federal ban, a threatened "supply-chain threat" designation, and a competing OpenAI-Pentagon deal announced within hours. For a large segment of users, Anthropic's stance read as a reason to switch, and they did, at record pace.
The number that should stick with marketers isn't the App Store rank. It's the speed. Free users up 60% since January and paid subscribers doubling in a year is the kind of share shift that used to take a generation of product cycles. It happened on a news cycle.
Where the users go, the queries go
It's easy to file this under "AI industry drama." The reason it lands on your desk is subtler. Every user who moves from ChatGPT to Claude also moves their product research, their "what's the best X for Y" questions, and their shopping intent to a different engine — one with its own training data, its own citation sources, and its own way of ranking and recommending brands.



