Artificial intelligence agents are only as good as the context they are provided. For many users, that context is currently trapped in the history of web-based chat interfaces. ExportGPT provides a mechanism for extracting this historical data, which can then be used to ground agents in a user's previous work, preferences, or technical discussions. It occupies the data ingestion layer of the agent stack, specifically focused on the retrieval of data from existing AI platforms.
Furthermore, as the industry moves toward autonomous agents that can navigate the web, the ability to programmatically or semi-programmatically export content from one tool to another becomes a core requirement. ExportGPT is a precursor to more advanced data-movement agents, solving the manual hurdle of data portability that currently limits the interoperability of generative AI tools.
ExportGPT is a utility built by exportAnything LLC that addresses a specific friction point in the current generative AI boom: the difficulty of getting data out of a chat interface. As OpenAI and its competitors have built increasingly capable models, they have also built increasingly sticky walled gardens. Your conversations with ChatGPT or your generations in Sora exist primarily within those proprietary web applications. ExportGPT is a browser extension designed to break those conversations free, allowing users to capture and export content into formats they actually own and control.
The tool is part of a growing category of "last-mile" AI utilities. While the industry focuses on massive model parameters and multi-billion dollar compute clusters, a separate, smaller ecosystem is emerging to handle the plumbing. This plumbing is necessary because, despite the intelligence of the models themselves, the user interfaces are often restrictive. If you want to move a long-form technical explanation from ChatGPT into a documentation tool like Notion or a codebase, you are often left with copy-pasting that breaks formatting. ExportGPT automates this by providing structured export options.
Based in Albuquerque, New Mexico, exportAnything LLC operates as a lean entity focused on these data portability tools. The company’s legal name suggests a broader mission than just AI; they position themselves as a provider of tools to capture and export content from supported websites. In the context of AI, this means supporting the formats that matter most to power users—Markdown for developers, PDFs for business reports, and image captures for creative workflows. The company maintains a straightforward presence, prioritizing functional utility over the marketing-heavy approach of larger AI startups.
The inclusion of Sora in their support list is a notable differentiator. While dozens of extensions handle ChatGPT exports, few have expanded to cover OpenAI’s video generation platform. This indicates a focus on staying current with OpenAI's product releases, which move at a pace that often leaves third-party developers scrambling. By supporting Sora, ExportGPT moves from being a simple text-scraper to a multi-modal data tool. This is particularly relevant for creators who need to manage large volumes of generated media that the native platform may not yet handle efficiently.
From a competitive standpoint, ExportGPT sits in a crowded field of browser extensions. Many of these are open-source projects or individual developer experiments. ExportGPT attempts to offer a more formal structure under an LLC, providing clear terms of service and privacy policies. This is increasingly important for corporate users who are wary of how browser extensions handle sensitive conversation data.
The challenge for the company is the same one facing all "wrapper" utilities: platform risk. If OpenAI decides to add a reliable, native export button, the primary value proposition of an extension like this diminishes. However, history suggests that platform owners are often slow to prioritize data portability features that might make it easier for users to leave or use other tools. Until then, exportAnything LLC fills a gap for users who view AI as a component of their workflow rather than the entirety of it.
A browser extension to capture and export content from ChatGPT and Sora.
ExportGPT is hiring.