Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

OpenAI is giving ChatGPT Plus subcription to a whole country

Malta’s partnership could push governments toward treating AI access like public infrastructure.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Man using ChatGPT on a laptop
Matheus Bertelli / Pexels

ChatGPT Plus used to feel like one of those optional internet subscriptions people quietly justified to themselves every month. Now, OpenAI is partnering with governments to roll it out at a national level, which honestly feels like a very different conversation altogether.

OpenAI has officially announced a partnership with Malta that will provide ChatGPT Plus access to all Maltese citizens and residents for one year after they complete a free AI literacy course. The initiative, called “AI for All,” is being developed alongside the University of Malta and is being described as the company’s first nationwide partnership of this kind.

OpenAI wants Malta to become a nationwide AI adoption experiment

Under the program, residents registered with Malta’s digital identity system will gain access to ChatGPT Plus after completing a government-backed AI training course focused on practical and responsible AI usage. The rollout begins this month and also includes Maltese citizens living abroad.

Countrywide ChatGPT Plus access for Malta: https://t.co/kd4YNjK3x1

— Greg Brockman (@gdb) May 16, 2026

On paper, the idea sounds fairly reasonable. Governments everywhere are trying to figure out how AI literacy will affect education, jobs, administration, and digital infrastructure over the next decade. OpenAI clearly wants to position itself at the center of that transition before competitors fully catch up.

Recommended Videos

Interestingly, Malta is not the only country moving in this direction. The UAE has also been working closely with OpenAI through its massive Stargate UAE infrastructure partnership, with multiple reports suggesting nationwide ChatGPT access is being explored there as well, although details around free ChatGPT Plus subscriptions remain somewhat unclear.

This is starting to feel less like software and more like digital infrastructure

What makes this deal interesting is how quickly AI tools are evolving from consumer products into something governments increasingly view as public infrastructure. Just a couple of years ago, ChatGPT was mostly a productivity tool for students, coders, and office workers. Now, entire countries are discussing nationwide AI access programs.

And honestly, that shift should probably make people pause a little. Once governments start integrating specific AI platforms into education, workplaces, and public services, these tools stop being optional conveniences and start becoming deeply embedded digital dependencies. For OpenAI, this is brilliant positioning, but if entire countries eventually begin relying on one company’s AI ecosystem, this stops being about chatbots and starts looking a lot more like infrastructure control.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
Japan built robot wolves to thwart bear attack, and they’re flying off the shelves
Orders for the “Monster Wolf” have reportedly tripled amid rising wildlife attacks.
Monster Wolf Robot in Japan Featured

There are very few headlines that sound equally believable as both a robotics breakthrough and the plot of a low-budget sci-fi horror movie. Japan deploying glowing robot wolves to scare away bears is definitely one of them. The country’s bizarre robots are suddenly seeing a huge spike in demand, as reported by AFP, as bear attacks and sightings continue surging across Japan.

Japan’s robot wolves are becoming surprisingly popular anti-bear weapons

Read more
Kenya tells Microsoft that $1 billion AI data center would gulp half the country’s electricity
The proposed facility reportedly demands electricity on a scale the country simply cannot afford right now.
Microsoft Logo on a building office

The AI industry keeps talking about bigger models, faster chips, and trillion-parameter futures. What it talks about far less is the absolutely absurd amount of electricity needed to keep all of this running. That reality just hit a major roadblock in Kenya, where Microsoft’s proposed $1 billion AI data center project is reportedly facing resistance after government officials warned that the facility could consume so much power it might require “switching off half the country” to keep it operational.

Microsoft’s Kenya AI data center reportedly needs more power than the grid can comfortably handle

Read more
Amazon employees are doing fake tasks because they’re forced to use more AI and show it
Amazon Building Office Logo

The corporate AI race is slowly starting to feel less like innovation and more like performance art. Companies desperately want employees to “embrace AI,” employees desperately want management off their backs, and somewhere in the middle, everyone is now apparently automating tasks nobody actually needed automated in the first place.

According to a new Financial Times report, Amazon employees are using the company’s internal AI tool called “MeshClaw” for unnecessary tasks simply to inflate their AI usage scores and appear more aligned with the company’s growing AI-first culture. For context, Amazon’s MeshClaw can initiate code deployments, triage emails, and interact with apps such as Slack, according to people familiar with the matter.

Read more