On March 2, Anthropic reportedly introduced a tool designed to export memory data from ChatGPT, facilitating the transfer of historical memory information to its model, Claude. According to BlockBeats, this development has garnered significant attention within the industry.
The tool operates by allowing users to copy and paste specific prompt words to export their memory data from OpenAI's ChatGPT and import it into Claude. Discussions suggest that this move could potentially undermine the user retention and conversion costs associated with ChatGPT's reliance on its memory function.
Market perspectives highlight the memory mechanism as a crucial competitive advantage for large model products. The longer users engage with a model, the deeper the model's understanding of their preferences, context, and historical dialogues becomes, increasing migration costs. If third-party tools can facilitate easy data migration, it may alter the current user retention logic of AI products.
Additionally, the report mentions that Anthropic was previously restricted by the U.S. Department of Defense systems, yet the company's popularity and attention have surged, topping some application charts.
Currently, the compliance specifics and platform responses regarding the tool remain unclear. Industry experts generally believe that competition among large models has extended from performance comparisons to ecosystem and data sovereignty aspects, with user data portability potentially becoming a key factor in the next phase.