- A User Saves a File
You save a photo, document, video, or audio clip on your device.
✅ The system detects this and starts working immediately.
- The File Is Temporarily Held (30–90 seconds)
The full file is held safely on the computer or local node.
It’s encrypted and backed up in case of a crash or power loss.
AI starts processing the file while it’s being held.
- AI Creates a Smart Memory Version
During the hold period, the AI builds:
A "seed" (summary, meaning, emotional tone, layout)
A "ghost" (snapshot or structure reference for layout or visuals)
This creates a version that looks and feels exactly like the original, but takes up almost no space.
Seed vs. Ghost:
They can be independent of each other and below describes their function.
What Is a Seed?
A Seed is the compressed, core representation of data. Think of it as:
The “DNA” of a file
Encoded meaning, structure, and behavior
Often includes:
Text embeddings
Audio signatures
Image layout metrics
Emotion/context tags
Purpose: Enables ultra-efficient storage and powerful hallucination-based reconstruction.
What Is a Ghost?
A Ghost is a visual or sensory snapshot — like a screenshot, waveform thumbnail, or layout frame.
It does not hold full data or meaning.
It's a visual/sensory anchor to aid:
Memory recall
Visual matching
UX/UI presentation (“Looks just like you remember it”)
Purpose: Helps users feel like nothing was lost, even though it’s reconstructed from Seeds.
When Are They Used Together?
They’re used together when:
The file is complex or emotionally important
The AI is unsure if hallucination will look identical
A fallback is needed (e.g., "Upgrade to Full Save" triggers if visual accuracy fails)
Example:
You upload a family photo.
→ Seed stores its relationships, layout, date, mood, people names, etc.
→ Ghost captures the exact photo appearance at that time.
When you call it back, the seed regenerates it — and the ghost is used to validate that it looks the same.
A hallucination is not stored like a file. Instead, it’s generated on-demand using the seed and a set of algorithms (within the AI model).
Think of it like baking bread:
The recipe = the seed
The baked bread = the hallucination
The kitchen (AI model) bakes the hallucination every time you need it
It doesn’t store the bread — just the recipe + the instructions
So Where Does It Live?
The hallucination lives in a temporary processing space, and this depends on the system architecture: