Show HN: ContextVault – Shared memory layer for your AI and your team

This AI team memory tool promised one shared brain, but commenters immediately asked: is that it

TLDR: ContextVault wants companies to keep all their AI notes and memory in one shared place so tools stay in sync over time. Commenters immediately questioned whether the usage limit is too small and whether the product is really just ordinary note storage dressed up with startup sparkle.

A new Show HN launch, ContextVault, is pitching itself as the cure for a very modern office headache: your team’s AI helpers keep forgetting things, and everyone’s notes are scattered in random files and folders. The idea is simple enough for non-tech folks: give your workplace one shared memory bank so different AI tools can read the same notes, keep them updated, and remember them between sessions. In theory, it’s the difference between ten coworkers scribbling on sticky notes and everyone using the same notebook.

But the comment section wasted zero time turning the sales pitch into a mini roast. The strongest reaction? Skepticism about value. One user immediately zoomed in on the pricing limit, asking how 15,000 queries a month could possibly be enough, which is the kind of practical question that instantly punctures startup sparkle. Another commenter delivered the sharpest jab of the thread, basically translating the whole product into: so… it’s just markdown files in a database? Ouch.

That’s where the drama lives: supporters see a tidy shared memory system for teams, while critics hear a fancy rebrand of something boring people already do with notes in a folder. The humor is dry, classic Hacker News energy: less meme spam, more surgical side-eye. In other words, ContextVault tried to sell a shared brain for AI, and the crowd replied, cool, but why does this sound like extra steps with a monthly cap?

Key Points

  • ContextVault is presented as a shared memory layer for AI systems and teams.
  • The product centers on a single vault intended to keep multiple AI agents in sync.
  • AI clients are described as being able to both read from and write to the vault.
  • Access and data organization are scoped per user, per agent, and per tenant.
  • The article positions ContextVault as an organizational tool for retaining and reusing knowledge across sessions instead of relying on scattered Markdown files or outdated local projects.

Hottest takes

"Does not feel like a lot" — casper14
"markdown files in a nosql database" — infogulch
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