
A personal AI agent may store some private data if it offers memory, account history, personalization, or connected features. The exact data stored depends on the app's design and privacy policy.
Stored data might include conversations, preferences, saved memories, created tools, account details, usage patterns, or files you upload. Some apps store more, some store less, and some offer controls to delete or limit memory.
You should check the official privacy policy and settings rather than assuming. Look for options to view memory, delete history, disable personalization, export data, or close your account.
You can usually confirm storage behavior directly in the product. Open settings and look for a memory or personalization page; a trustworthy agent shows what it holds and lets you remove items line by line.
Distinguish the layers of storage: chat history, extracted memories, and account data are usually separate systems. An app may let you delete one while quietly retaining the others, so check each individually.
Storage is acceptable when it is purposeful. Let the agent keep the operational details that make it useful, question anything stored without a clear function, and remove entries that no longer serve you.