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Tom’s Guide
Tom’s Guide
Technology
Elton Jones

ChatGPT’s improved memory makes it feel way more personal — here’s what it remembers now

ChatGPT running on an iPhone.

We’re sure you’ve noticed that ChatGPT’s ability to remember your past conversations with it is spotty at best. Thankfully, OpenAI has rolled out an update for ChatGPT Plus and Pro subscribers that enhances the AI's recall rate, making it even more reliable as an AI companion.

Here's what's new with ChatGPT's memory

OpenAI’s latest update was detailed in its release notes, and it details how ChatGPT has an easier time bringing up specifics from everything you’ve told the chatbot before.

The notes are as follows: “When reference chat history is enabled, ChatGPT can now more reliably find specific details from your past chats when you ask. Any past chat used to answer your question now appears as a source so you can open and review the original context. This memory improvement is now available for Plus and Pro users globally.”

ChatGPT vs Alexa+: which chatbot’s memory is stronger

(Image credit: Shutterstock)

In the race to build the most useful chatbot, OpenAI is clearly trying to stay one step ahead of Amazon's Alexa+.

The e-commerce giant rolled out an upgraded version of its AI voice assistant, Alexa+, last year, and one of its biggest improvements is a stronger memory system designed to make responses feel more personal over time.

For example, you can email or upload important documents, handwritten notes, and photos, and Alexa+ can pull details from them later in future conversations. You can also tell it to remember everyday preferences, like what foods you like, so it can recommend recipes that actually fit your taste instead of starting from scratch every time.

ChatGPT’s latest upgrade makes it even more essential

ChatGPT’s enhanced memory isn’t the only upgrade users have been given access to lately—a standalone translation tool called ChatGPT Translate has rolled out for everyone via desktop and mobile devices.

Then there’s seemingly an upcoming ChatGPT extension that’s being set up to unify the chatbot’s mobile and desktop experiences. X user @btibor91 (Tibor Blaho) took notice of this unannounced feature (codenamed “Agora”) and how it alludes to ChatGPT, incorporating group-based exchanges.

Final thoughts

OpenAI is always looking to improve ChatGPT, and this latest enhancement to its memory module looks to be one of the best ones to date. Judging by X user @_simonsmith's tweet about his positive impressions of the chatbot's memory recall, it seems to be a hit thus far.

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