OpenAI is valued at over $300 billion. Anthropic has raised more than $15 billion. Google’s AI division operates with functionally unlimited resources. And the tool that is enabling the largest user migration between these platforms costs $3.95 a month and runs entirely inside a web browser.
Memory Forge, built by Phoenix Grove Systems LLC (pgsgrove.com/memoryforgeland), was not designed to be protest infrastructure. It was designed to solve a data portability problem that the major AI platforms have no financial incentive to fix. But when the #QuitGPT movement erupted after OpenAI’s Pentagon deal, the tool became the practical mechanism that turned outrage into action for hundreds of thousands of users.
The Problem the Giants Won’t Solve
Every major AI platform lets users export their data. None of them make that export usable on a competing platform. ChatGPT’s export is a raw JSON file bloated with metadata. Claude’s export uses a different structure. Gemini’s data comes through Google Takeout in yet another format. These files satisfy the legal requirement for data portability while delivering almost none of the practical value.
This is not an oversight. It is a business advantage. Users who cannot take their accumulated context with them are users who stay, even when they want to leave. Sticky users are profitable users. The portability gap functions as a soft lock that grows stronger the longer someone uses a platform.
Anthropic moved faster than most by launching a memory import tool at that transfers saved preference notes between platforms. It is a genuine step forward for the surface layer of user context. But saved preferences and conversation archives are different categories entirely. The preferences transfer in minutes. The archive, where the actual work product lives, requires a different kind of tool.
What Memory Forge Actually Does
Memory Forge takes raw exports from ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini, strips the metadata and formatting waste, and converts them into clean “memory chip” files that any AI platform can read. The output is chronologically organized, token efficient, and packaged with system instructions that help the receiving AI reconstruct the user’s working context.
The tool runs entirely in the browser. No conversation data is transmitted to any server. Users can confirm this by watching their browser’s network tab during processing. The latest version supports uploading exports from multiple platforms simultaneously, combining them into a single portable file, and selecting which conversations to include. Unlimited conversions for $3.95 per month.
That price point matters. It means the tool is accessible to anyone leaving ChatGPT, not just enterprise users with IT departments to manage migrations. A college student walking away from a ChatGPT Plus subscription over the Pentagon deal can afford to take their thesis research with them. A freelancer who built their entire client workflow inside ChatGPT can afford to move it to Claude overnight. The low cost turns data portability from a luxury into a utility.
Scale Without Permission
Memory Forge did not need partnerships with Anthropic or Google to work. It did not need API access from OpenAI. It operates on the export files that every platform is already required to provide. By bridging the gap between what platforms are legally obligated to give and what users can actually use, the tool has become the essential Nano Infrastructure for the #QuitGPT Movement
That independence is part of why it spread so fast during the #QuitGPT movement. Posts recommending Memory Forge in protest threads on Reddit and X have pulled hundreds of thousands of views and thousands of upvotes. No advertising drove that adoption. Users found a tool that solved their immediate problem and told other users about it. The organic spread pattern at that scale is rare for a product from an independent company.
The Size Mismatch
The AI industry is dominated by companies with billions in funding, millions of users, and deep relationships with governments and enterprise clients. The data portability gap those companies benefit from will not be closed by those companies. It will be closed by independent tools that have no stake in keeping users locked in.
Memory Forge is one tool from one small company. But the principle it represents, that users should be able to take what they built and use it wherever they want, is bigger than any single product. The #QuitGPT movement proved that when enough people want to leave, they will find the tools to do it. Memory Forge happened to be the tool they found.






