Claude's memory stays in Claude. ChatGPT's custom instructions stay in ChatGPT. Every AI platform's memory feature exists to keep your context trapped inside their product. This has a name. Here's what it means — and how to escape it.
The argument
In 2023, the major AI platforms all launched "memory" features. The framing was consistent: your AI will finally remember you. Your preferences. Your context. Your way of working. No more starting over every session.
The pitch was correct. The product was not what it appeared to be.
What they built was not portable memory. It was platform-bound memory. Your context lives inside Claude's system. Or inside ChatGPT's. Or inside Gemini's. It knows you — but only when you're inside their product. The moment you open a competitor's tab, you're a stranger again.
This isn't an accident. It's architecture. And the architecture reflects an incentive structure that doesn't serve you.
The more thoroughly you brief a platform, the more expensive it is to leave. Every preference you set, every context you teach, every custom instruction you refine — it deepens the moat around your own data. You did the work. They hold the exit.
This is the Platform Trap. The bait is convenience. The hook is context debt. And no AI platform will fix it, because fixing it would require them to make your knowledge work inside a competitor's product. Their incentive structure makes this architecturally impossible.
So the question isn't which platform has the best memory feature. The question is: who owns your context? If the answer is "they do," you're in the trap.
The evidence
Three major AI platforms. Three memory features. Three identical lock-in mechanisms — each marketed as personalization.
Remembers your working style, preferences, and project context — but only inside Anthropic's products. Your context is a competitive moat for Claude, not portable infrastructure for you.
OpenAI's memory system knows your preferences, your name, your projects. None of it is accessible outside ChatGPT. The more you invest, the harder it is to switch. That's the feature.
Google's AI assistant remembers context across sessions — but that context compounds inside Google's ecosystem only. It knows you on Google's terms. Switch tools and start over.
Because portability means your context works in their competitor's product. A memory feature that exports cleanly to ChatGPT is a feature OpenAI would never ship. A Claude context layer that loads perfectly into Gemini is a feature Anthropic would never build. The incentive structure makes this impossible by design. It isn't negligence — it's architecture.
The structural argument
This isn't about technical capability. Every major AI company could build portable context tomorrow. The reason they won't is simpler and more uncomfortable: their business model depends on you staying.
You brief Claude, or ChatGPT, or Gemini. You set preferences. You teach it your style. You build up context over weeks, months, years. Each session is faster because of the prior sessions.
The better the platform knows you, the more expensive it is to leave. You'd lose months of accumulated context. You'd have to re-explain everything. The switching cost is real — and it's by design.
To solve the Platform Trap, a company would need to build a feature that makes your context work better in their competitor's product. No publicly-traded AI company will ship that feature. Their incentive structure prevents it.
The exit can't be built by anyone with platform interests. The solution has to come from a neutral layer — infrastructure that exists between you and the platforms, owned by neither. That's what CacheTank is.
The test
One test. Open a different AI tool than the one you briefed last week. Does it know who you are? That's the question platform memory can never answer yes to.
The exit
CacheTank is not an AI. It's infrastructure. A portable context layer that sits between you and every AI tool you use. You save what matters. It organizes it. A private URL delivers it — anywhere, any model, any time.
Claude doesn't need to know you through their memory system. You bring your context to Claude. And to ChatGPT. And to Grok. And to whatever comes next.
No platform can trap context that lives at a URL you own.
Save your expertise, preferences, and working decisions once. Your private context URL works in any tool — paste it at the top of any conversation and every AI instantly knows who you are.
cachetank.com/ctx/your-token
CacheTank does not generate. It does not infer. It does not train a model on your context. It applies rules — structured storage, organized delivery, predictable behavior. IT-safe by design.
We're not an AI platform. We have no incentive to keep your context inside our product. We don't compete with Claude or ChatGPT — we make them work better for you, wherever you are.
Platform memory vs. CacheTank
Both are called "memory." They are opposite ideas. One serves the platform. One serves you.
Escape the trap
Stop briefing from scratch. Stop losing context when you switch tools. Start every AI session already known.