12 lines
1.6 KiB
JSON
12 lines
1.6 KiB
JSON
{
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"HubID": "5732",
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"Date": "01/30/2026",
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"HubTags": ["External Platform Posts"],
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"Contacts": ["contact1", "contact2"],
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"Companies": "",
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"File": "",
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"Image": "save_chats.jpg",
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"Summary": "This is a highly recommended practice I started about a year ago—and I’ve since heard from many others who do the same: save all of your AI chats in your own files. Why? To reduce platform lock-in and protect yourself if a platform changes, degrades, or disappears. And let’s be honest—enshitification is already creeping into AI platforms, while open-source alternatives you can run locally on your own equipment are accelerating fast. Your chat history isn’t just a record of you—your interests, thinking, and activity—it’s valuable intelligence that helps AI work better for you. If you save it, that intelligence can never be taken away. And instead of the AI running more inference to give you answers, which is more costs, it can search your memory to see if the answer is already there.I organize all my chats into folders using the same structure across platforms (OpenAI, Grok, Gemini, Claude), and mirror that exact structure in Google Drive. Once a week (Mondays), I copy the prior week’s chats into Google Docs and file them accordingly. ChatGPT tells me I’m a top 1% user, so yes—it’s a bit of work—but it goes fast. I can usually get through everything in 30 minutes or less. I've looked into automating this with scraping, but have not found a workable solution and, predictably, the AI platforms will make it harder to copy your content out because they want to lock you in, so the copy paste I do above may be it for now.",
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"Notes": ""
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}
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