
Chinese 1,000,000,000 Dollars Hell Bank Note (The Hell Bank Corporation)
Hell money is a form of joss paper printed to resemble legal tender bank notes. This faux money has been in use since at least the late 19th century and possibly much earlier. Early 20th century examples took the resemblance of minor commercial currency of the type issued by businesses across China until the mid-1940s. The notes are not an officially recognized currency or legal tender since their sole intended purpose is to be offered as burnt-offerings to the deceased as often practiced by the Chinese and several East Asian cultures. The identification of this type of joss paper as "hell bank notes" or "hell money" and singling them out is largely a western phenomenon, since these items are simply regarded as yet another form of joss paper (冥幣, 陰司紙, 紙錢, or 金紙) in East Asian cultures and have no special name or status.
- ASIN
- B00OXKE0KO
- Embedding
- CLIP ViT-L/14 · 768d
- Distance metric
- cosine
- Doc fetch
- 26mscache missGET /v2/namespaces/amazon-products/documents/B00OXKE0KO
- Similar query
- 29msre-embed title → /query
Doc fetch goes through Layer's Aerospike pull-through cache; cache hit served the row without touching turbopuffer. The similar query re-embeds this product's title with CLIP-text and runs a vector query — queries don't go through the doc cache, so no cache header is set.
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