ChatGPT Will Soon Remember Everything You’ve Ever Told It

by oqtey
ChatGPT Will Soon Remember Everything You've Ever Told It

Be careful what you share with ChatGPT these days: It’ll remember everything you say.

That’s because OpenAI is rolling out a new update to ChatGPT’s memory that allows the bot to access the contents of all of your previous chats. The idea is that by pulling from your past conversations, ChatGPT will be able to offer more relevant results to your questions, queries, and overall discussions. Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, announced the changes on X, touting the usefulness of AI systems that know everything about you:

ChatGPT’s memory feature is a little over a year old at this point, but its function has been much more limited than the update OpenAI is rolling out today. ChatGPT could remember preferences or requests of yours—perhaps you have a favorite formatting style for summaries, or a nickname you want the bot to call you—and carry those memories along from chat to chat. However, it wasn’t perfect, and couldn’t naturally pull from past conversations, as a feature like “memory” might imply.

Previously, the bot stored those data points in a bank of “saved memories.” You could access this memory bank at any time and see what the bot had stored based on your conversations. It’s a bit weird to see these entries when you didn’t specifically ask ChatGPT to remember something for you—as if you found out a new friend was jotting down “useful facts” about you from past conversations. It’s weird.

As this feature is rolling out now, it isn’t clear yet how it will affect these saved memories. In all likelihood, they’ll disappear, as there’s no need for a bank of specific memories when ChatGPT can simply pull from everything you’ve ever said to the bot.

I don’t personally use ChatGPT all that much outside testing new features to cover here, so I can’t say whether I find this feature particularly useful or not. I can imagine how it might be helpful to be able to reference something you told the bot in a past conversation, especially without needing to establish the bot actually remembers that fact first, but I also don’t love the idea of a chatbot “remembering” everything I’ve ever told it. Maybe that’s because I’m not sold on the idea of generative AI as a personal assistant, or maybe it’s because I’m sick of tech companies scooping so much of my data. We’ll just have to see how useful this expanded memory turns out to be as users get their hands on it.

This feature will roll out first to ChatGPT Plus and Pro subscribers, but there’s no word at this time as to when free users can expect to try it out. Users in the U.K., EU, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland will need to wait to use the feature as well, as local laws force extra reviews before it can launch. (Maybe all countries should force AI companies through extra reviews before shipping features.)

What do you think so far?

How to disable ChatGPT’s memory

If you, like me, have reservations about your chatbot accessing every word of your past conversations, there is a way to disable this memory feature.

I don’t have the new feature yet, so it’s possible this might change slightly. But at the moment, you can head to Settings > Personalization > Memory, then disable the toggle next to Reference saved memories.

If you want to keep the memory feature on, but don’t want ChatGPT to remember one chat in particular, you can launch a “temporary chat” to make sure the conversation is quarantined. (Just know OpenAI may still hold onto the transcript for up to 30 days.)

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