#opg $OPG A few days ago, I noticed something that made me stop and think.
Every AI tool I use seems to remember me a little better over time. It learns my writing style, my favorite topics, and even the way I ask questions.
At first, I thought that was just convenience.
Then another question came to my mind:
Who actually owns that memory?
If I spend months teaching an AI how I think, why should that knowledge become an asset for someone else's platform instead of remaining mine?
Imagine hiring a personal assistant for years.
They learn your habits, your workflow, your preferences, and the way you make decisions.
Now imagine being told that if you leave, all of that knowledge stays with the company—not with you.
That doesn't feel like ownership.
It feels like renting your own intelligence.
This is one of the reasons I find OpenGradient interesting.
Instead of treating user context as something locked inside a platform, the vision is different: your data, your memory, and your AI context should remain under your control.
As AI becomes part of our daily lives, memory may become more valuable than the model itself.
The future may not belong to the AI that remembers the most.
It may belong to the AI that remembers for you, not about you.
That's a future worth building.
#AI #UserOwnedAI #verifiableAI @OpenGradient $OPG