Protesters demand OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind halt AI development

3 hours ago 22

About 200 protesters marched through San Francisco on Saturday, tracing a route from OpenAI’s headquarters straight through to the offices of Anthropic and Google DeepMind. The message was blunt: stop training more powerful AI models until someone figures out what they’re actually doing to society.

The demonstration, organized by a group called Stop the AI Race, marks the second time the same coalition has taken to the streets in 2026. A similar march happened in March, targeting the same companies with the same core demands.

What the protesters actually want

The signs and chants centered on three grievances: AI safety, job displacement, and environmental damage from the energy-hungry data centers powering frontier models.

Organizers called directly on executives at OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind to pause the training of new, more capable AI systems.

Where crypto fits into this picture

The protest itself had nothing to do with crypto. But the regulatory and political environment it reflects is directly shaping price action in a specific corner of the token market.

Decentralized AI tokens, projects built around the idea of running AI inference outside the control of any single company or government, have been moving on AI policy news. Venice, which trades under the ticker VVV, gained approximately 14% following a U.S. government order restricting access to Anthropic’s models. Morpheus, trading as MOR, moved roughly 21% in the same window.

What investors should actually watch

The 14% and 21% moves in VVV and MOR are notable, but they’re also a reminder that this corner of the market is highly reactive and thin. Price swings of that magnitude on regulatory headlines suggest these tokens are still driven more by narrative sentiment than by underlying usage metrics.

The March protest generated some coverage and little policy response. The July follow-up, with similar scale and renewed media attention, suggests the group is not going away.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Read Entire Article