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"path": "/t/portable-personal-ai-identity-a-user-owned-memory-layer-for-ai-assistants/1382003#post_1",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-29T11:40:22.000Z",
"site": "https://community.openai.com",
"textContent": "Hello OpenAI Team and Community,\n\nAs AI assistants become increasingly personalized, I believe we are approaching a point where memory itself may become one of the most valuable components of the user experience.\n\nToday, AI systems can remember information, but there is still a significant difference between storing facts and maintaining a living, evolving understanding of a person over time.\n\nMy idea is the creation of a Portable Personal AI Identity.\n\nWith explicit user consent, an AI assistant could gradually build a personal knowledge profile that includes preferences, goals, habits, communication style, interests, skills, important life events, and long-term context.\n\nHowever, the most important aspect is that this profile would not function as a static database.\n\nInstead, it would continuously evolve.\n\nFor example, if a user studies German for several years and later stops, the system should recognize that this information has become less relevant. If a user changes careers, develops new interests, or enters a different stage of life, the AI should adapt its understanding accordingly rather than preserving outdated assumptions indefinitely.\n\nThe second part of the idea is portability.\n\nUsers should be able to carry this AI identity across platforms, devices, applications, and potentially future AI-powered hardware or robots.\n\nJust as we can connect our Google accounts, calendars, or cloud storage services to different applications, we could connect our personal AI identity to any compatible AI system.\n\nThis would allow users to maintain continuity rather than rebuilding context, preferences, and history from scratch every time they switch products or ecosystems.\n\nOne possible implementation could be a secure AI identity layer or extension that users fully control, deciding what information is shared, where it is shared, and with which AI systems.\n\nIn my opinion, the future value of AI will not only come from larger models and better reasoning capabilities, but also from the ability to develop a persistent understanding of the people they assist.\n\nI’d love to hear what the community thinks about this concept and whether something similar could become part of the future AI ecosystem.\n\nThank you for reading.",
"title": "Portable Personal AI Identity: A User-Owned Memory Layer for AI Assistants"
}