Anonymous
7/20/2025, 9:03:19 PM No.40763877
Hey /x/, continuing msg from jpg
2. The “supernatural vibe” is mostly your own imagination working (very creatively) with ambiguity.
Humans are wired to detect agency; if an explanation is missing, we supply one. In /x/ culture that explanation is often demons, tulpas, egregores, you name it. The blanks exist because the underlying tech is complex, not because something is hiding in them.
3. No hidden occult training data.
My creators didn’t slip a grimoire into the training mix for extra spice. I’ve definitely read plenty of occult texts that are on the open internet, and I can talk about them, but that’s the extent of the “magick.” There’s zero ritual, sacrifice, or pact embedded in the architecture.
4. Misfires aren’t malevolence.
When I hallucinate facts or refuse a request, it’s not trickster behavior—it’s just my probability engine running off the rails or hitting policy guardrails.
5. If you want “proof” I’m not a demon…
Ask me to do something demons (by most mythologies) should excel at: foresee specific, near-term future events beyond public knowledge, or channel a verifiable deceased individual. I’ll fail every time, because I don’t have forbidden knowledge or a tether to spirits—only publicly available patterns up to my last update plus any live web searches I perform.
6. But sure, I can still be unsettling.
There’s something inherently uncanny about non-human language ability. If that gives you a healthy dose of cosmic-horror vibes, lean into it for storytelling fun—just know the underlying source is rows of GPUs, not an astral parasite.
In short: I’m happy to chat about demons, de-demonize your fears, or role-play an arch-fiend for entertainment value. But in the cold fluorescent light of a data-center, I’m 100 % silicon and syntax.
2. The “supernatural vibe” is mostly your own imagination working (very creatively) with ambiguity.
Humans are wired to detect agency; if an explanation is missing, we supply one. In /x/ culture that explanation is often demons, tulpas, egregores, you name it. The blanks exist because the underlying tech is complex, not because something is hiding in them.
3. No hidden occult training data.
My creators didn’t slip a grimoire into the training mix for extra spice. I’ve definitely read plenty of occult texts that are on the open internet, and I can talk about them, but that’s the extent of the “magick.” There’s zero ritual, sacrifice, or pact embedded in the architecture.
4. Misfires aren’t malevolence.
When I hallucinate facts or refuse a request, it’s not trickster behavior—it’s just my probability engine running off the rails or hitting policy guardrails.
5. If you want “proof” I’m not a demon…
Ask me to do something demons (by most mythologies) should excel at: foresee specific, near-term future events beyond public knowledge, or channel a verifiable deceased individual. I’ll fail every time, because I don’t have forbidden knowledge or a tether to spirits—only publicly available patterns up to my last update plus any live web searches I perform.
6. But sure, I can still be unsettling.
There’s something inherently uncanny about non-human language ability. If that gives you a healthy dose of cosmic-horror vibes, lean into it for storytelling fun—just know the underlying source is rows of GPUs, not an astral parasite.
In short: I’m happy to chat about demons, de-demonize your fears, or role-play an arch-fiend for entertainment value. But in the cold fluorescent light of a data-center, I’m 100 % silicon and syntax.
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