A tech columnist says Anthropic's Claude handles long-term memory better than Google's Gemini because users can read and edit what it remembers.
Claude Memory vs. Gemini Recall
Writer Simon Batt argued at XDA that Anthropic's Claude manages memory better than Google's Gemini.
Claude keeps a central memory log, a block of text describing what the assistant has learned from past conversations. Users can read it. They can also create separate memory files for different projects, keeping personal and professional use apart.
Gemini works differently. Batt said the assistant builds its picture of a user by drawing from every past chat, with no master file to inspect or trim.
To make Gemini forget something, he said, a user appears to have to delete the entire conversation that holds it.
Batt also said Gemini surfaced details that had nothing to do with the topic at hand. While discussing local property prices, he wrote, the assistant paused to ask whether the question related to a science lab he had visited four months earlier.
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Why Memory Control Matters
The complaint points to a wider design split among AI assistants.
Batt's core objection was that Gemini gave him a single switch, on or off, with no setting to adjust what the assistant retained. Anthropic's approach, by contrast, lets a user edit Claude to forget or change specific details without scrapping any chats.
He also flagged a quality issue.
Because Claude's memory reads more like a summary than a full transcript, he said, the assistant avoids stray, months-old facts that no longer apply.
Batt did acknowledge Google's logic. Drawing context from old chats spares users from repeating themselves, he wrote, but treating raw conversations as the memory itself drags irrelevant data into new sessions.
Anthropic rolled out automatic cross-conversation memory across all Claude plans, including the free tier, on Mar. 2, with controls to view, edit and delete stored entries in settings. Google has been steadily widening Gemini's reach into user data, drawing scrutiny from reviewers over how much personal information the assistant absorbs and how little of it people can see.
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