MemoryLake
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MemoryLake vs Memoir

Memoir replaces opaque vector databases with transparent, Git-versioned, cryptographically secure semantic memory — a developer's dream for auditable storage. MemoryLake delivers the same transparency and versioning as a managed product, then adds cross-model portability, multimodal documents and user ownership.

Memoir

Versioned Memory Engine (open-source)

Strengths

  • Git-like version control over memory
  • Transparent, hierarchical semantic memory (vs opaque vector stores)
  • Cryptographically secure storage
  • High-performance retrieval
  • Open-source and self-hostable

Limitations

  • Open-source developer engine — you run and maintain it
  • Focused on the versioning + semantic-memory primitive
  • No end-user product, UI or managed option
  • Not a multimodal document platform
  • Smaller community and support surface
Full Memory Platform

MemoryLake

AI Memory Infrastructure

Strengths

  • Git-style version control — branch, commit, merge, rollback, immutable audit log
  • Cross-model portability across ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini and coding agents via MCP
  • End-to-end encrypted, user-owned data
  • Multimodal ingestion — PDF, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Markdown, images (D1 VLM)
  • Automatic conflict detection & resolution + compliance-grade provenance
  • No-code product with a published LoCoMo benchmark

Considerations

  • Managed service — not open-source / self-hosted
  • Newer entrant with a smaller community than the OSS leaders

Feature-by-Feature Comparison

FeatureMemoirMemoryLake
Core focusGit-versioned semantic memory engineCross-model memory product for people & teams
Memory scopePer-agent / appCross-model, cross-session, cross-device
PortabilityVia integration / self-hostModel-neutral (via MCP)
VersioningGit-likeGit-style (branch / commit / merge / rollback)
ProvenanceTransparent / cryptographicFull source traceability + audit log
Multimodal ingestionNot supportedPDF · Word · Excel · PPT · Markdown · images
DeliveryOSS, self-hostManaged, no-code product
Accuracy (LoCoMo)94.03% *(self-reported)*

Architecture Comparison

Memoir and MemoryLake agree that memory should be transparent and versioned, not an opaque vector blob. Memoir is the OSS engine you operate; MemoryLake is the managed, cross-model product that adds documents and ownership.

Memoir Pipeline

input
hierarchical semantic memory
Git-like versioned, cryptographic store
retrieve

MemoryLake Pipeline

Ingest (multimodal, D1 VLM)
Type & structure
Conflict check & versioning
Store (E2E-encrypted, user-owned)
Serve to any AI via MCP

Which Is Right for You?

Choose Memoir if...

  • You want an open-source, Git-versioned semantic memory engine
  • Cryptographic security and transparency are top priorities
  • You're a developer happy to self-host and maintain
  • You don't need multimodal documents or a UI
  • A managed product isn't required

Choose MemoryLake if...

  • You want Git-style versioning without running an engine
  • You use multiple AIs and want one shared, owned memory
  • You work with documents (PDF/Office/images), not just text
  • Data ownership and encryption are non-negotiable
  • You want a no-code product with a benchmark
  • You want conflict detection handled for you

Frequently Asked Questions

Is MemoryLake an alternative to Memoir?

Yes — both version memory transparently; MemoryLake delivers it managed, cross-model and document-aware.

They both do Git-like versioning — what's different?

Memoir is a self-hosted engine focused on versioning + semantic memory. MemoryLake bundles versioning with portability, documents and ownership as a product.

Can I use MemoryLake across different models?

Yes — model-neutral via an MCP Server.

Do I own my data?

Yes — end-to-end encrypted and user-owned; even MemoryLake cannot read it.

Can I migrate from Memoir to MemoryLake?

Yes — recreate Projects and Memories and keep a branch/commit workflow without self-hosting.

Does MemoryLake support documents?

Yes — PDF, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Markdown and images via the D1 VLM engine.

Is Memoir better for self-hosted control?

If self-hosting and cryptographic ownership of the engine matter most, Memoir fits. For a managed, cross-model product, MemoryLake adds more.

How is accuracy measured?

94.03% on LoCoMo (self-reported); request the methodology for reproduction. ---

Ready to Try MemoryLake?

Transparent, versioned memory — managed, owned and portable across every AI.