Chatbots that forget your conversation mid-stream are the new buffering wheel, except Memvid just posted a $800 gig to weaponize that frustrating. The AI startup wants to hire a “Professional AI Bully” for eight hours of documented torture-testing, exposing how badly current chatbots handle memory. Your job? Make ChatGPT cry digital tears while cameras roll.
The Perfect Candidate Has Trust Issues
Memvid seeks candidates with “extensive personal history of being let down by technology” — no AI expertise required.
Picture your last chatbot conversation that went sideways after message fifteen. Memvid wants that exact energy, seeking candidates with “extensive personal history of being let down by technology.” No AI expertise required — just pure, refined disappointment and the patience to repeat yourself until silicon breaks.
You’ll spend a day systematically breaking popular chatbots, documenting every forgotten detail and misremembered fact while getting paid more than most people make in a week. Requirements stay refreshingly honest:
- Be 18+
- Comfortable on camera
- Harbor “strong anti-AI opinions”
CEO Mohamed Omar essentially wants professional skeptics who’ve been burned by overpromising tech before.
The Memory Fix Behind the Marketing Stunt
Memvid’s file-based memory layers promise what current AI can’t deliver: conversations that actually remember previous exchanges.
Memvid’s real product transforms that frustration into actionable solutions through file-based memory layers. While you’re busy exposing how chatbots forget your project requirements between sessions, the startup feeds those failures back into their persistent context system. Their technology promises what current AI can’t deliver: conversations that actually remember previous exchanges without hallucinating details.
The company offers both developer tools for technical users and Kora, a chatbot designed for regular folks who just want AI that works. Think of it as therapy for forgetful algorithms — except instead of talking through issues, it builds external memory banks that prevent the forgetting in the first place.
When AI Subscriptions Become Expensive Disappointments
Early job applicants have flooded Memvid with complaints about $300 monthly AI subscriptions that lose context mid-project.
Knowledge workers are already spending $300 monthly on AI subscriptions that can’t remember their preferences past Tuesday. Early job applicants have flooded Memvid with complaints about chatbots that lose context mid-project, forcing endless repetition of background information. That rage represents a real market gap between AI marketing promises and delivered performance.
The viral job posting emerged March 19th across outlets from Business Insider to Gizmodo, tapping into collective frustration with overhyped AI capabilities. Selection happens within weeks, with potential for multiple hires if demand explodes.
If you’re tired of explaining the same context to chatbots every conversation, Memvid’s memory solution might finally deliver the persistent AI assistant you were promised. Whether through bullying chatbots for cash or using their improved memory layer, the fix addresses what everyone using AI deals with daily: technology that forgets faster than it learns.





























