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A great thing about GPT-3 fiction is that it often ends with an "about the author" prompt, so you know what local maximum your prompt leads to. (Latest was Alastair Reynolds.)
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GPT-3 is attempting to tell me a haunted house story in which the house has now been purchased and converted into a bed-and-breakfast four times in a row.
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You will never guess what happened to Liz and Phil.pic.twitter.com/Oxvm0KZIRe
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What's interesting is that GPT-3 sometimes drifts from the topic (one ghost story turned into a story about an affair) but sometimes sticks with it throughout.
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So I gave it a prompt about using data to identify haunted houses and then investing in them because occult risk is uncorrelated, and it actually told a story about a) ghosts, and b) investing. And then I ran out of credits.
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Replying to @ByrneHobart
This is an actual thing in Japan, though it is more occult preference arbitrage. A house someone has died in is inauspicious, and by law must be disclosed to new buyers or tenants. The rent hit is on the order of 10 to 20%. The traditional remedy is to pay for an exorcism.
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Replying to @patio11 @ByrneHobart
The less traditional remedy, much beloved of boutique investors in Tokyo, is “Here’s a beautiful apartment in X renting at a market rate, Mr. Foreigner. I am legally obligated to inform you that the previous owner passed in it.”
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tired: arguing that immigration is necessary to make pension math work wired: arguing that immigration is necessary to make the real estate market clear
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