marius ndini

AI Is Learning About You. You Should Own What It Learns

When people talk about AI memory, it’s usually framed from the developer’s side. How do we store it? How do we retrieve it? How do we keep context alive? This is where @Mnexium AI started as well since that ecosystem is important.

But the initial vision and goal was very different and yet to be executed on.

What if users owned their memories — not just the app owners?

Today, every AI product builds its own silo. You tell one app your name, preferences, goals, history… and the next app knows nothing. You are forced to re-introduce yourself over and over. Your “digital self” is fragmented across different tools and apps. We've always operated under this model and we still do today for the most part. Claude wont share with chatGPT and vice versa and other apps wont share with other apps.

Thats because you don't own your memories. The app provider does.

Mnexium’s long-term vision is to flip the model and give equal opportunity to users as well as app developers.

Instead of memory belonging to the app, memory belongs to (YOU) the person.

  • Your preferences

  • Your history

  • Your goals

  • Your context

Live in your Mnexium space. Apps don’t hoard it, they request access from you.

That unlocks something new:

  • You can see what an AI remembers about you

  • You can edit or delete it

  • You can share it intentionally between apps

  • you can hide it as you see fit

So, going forward we can have:

  • A fitness app learning your goals

  • A travel app learning your preferences

  • A productivity agent learning your work style

and all of them can draw from the same memory foundation.

Why we started with developers first

Bootstrap from the user side is nearly impossible. If we launched with “here’s a memory vault—fill it,” most people wouldn't. Memory only becomes valuable after it exists.

Developers already feel this pain. Their apps forget, repeat themselves, and silo user context. By starting with a developer API, Mnexium solves a real, immediate problem—and in the process, memories are naturally created for users.

Over time, your memories already exist. You don’t have to seed them, you just claim them. The real challenge isn’t whether AI will remember you. It’s whether you get to own that memory.

The same way OAuth gave users control over identity, Mnexium aims to give users control over memory.

AI shouldn’t feel like a thousand strangers.
It should feel like your assistant — wherever you go.

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