“The conversation is too long, please start a new one.”
Your conversation isn't lost. Paste it below — you'll get a fresh-start message that carries over what matters, so the new chat picks up where this one gave out.
Even easier — paste a share link. On Claude or ChatGPT: open your chat → Share → Copy link, then paste the link here instead of the text. We pull the whole conversation server-side, nothing missed. (A share link makes that chat viewable by anyone with the URL — you can un-share it right after.)
🔒 We never store your conversation. Pasted text is analyzed right in your browser; a share link (and the written rescue) is processed on our server and discarded immediately after — never saved, never trained on.
How this level was decided
Built from your own conversation — the goal, the things that got lost, and where you left off. Edit anything, then paste it as the first message of a new chat.
Why this happens
ChatGPT can only hold a certain amount of conversation in mind at once (its “context window”). When your chat crosses that limit, it refuses new messages with exactly this error. It has shown the same message since 2023, and it always lands mid-project: long research threads, writing sessions, planning that spans days.
Won't I lose everything by starting a new chat?
Not if the new chat starts with the right context. The handoff built above quotes your own conversation: your goal, the constraints you had to repeat, and the last state of the work. Paste it as the first message of a fresh conversation and continue — fresh chats are also faster and sharper than saturated ones.
What about ChatGPT's memory?
ChatGPT's memory remembers facts about you across chats — it doesn't rescue a specific conversation that hit the wall. The decisions, corrections and half-finished work inside this thread still need to be carried over explicitly. That's what the handoff does.
How the check works
The page reads your pasted conversation locally and looks for verifiable signs of wear: things you had to repeat, corrections you had to make, answers that came back nearly identical. Every flag is backed by a quote from your own chat — click “why we say this” under any finding. What it can't detect (silent contradictions nobody flagged), it says so instead of guessing.