Is the set $S:=\{n\in\mathbb{N} \mid \text{$n$, $n+1$ and $n+2$ have the same number of divisors}\}$ infinite?
Example: $33\in S$.
Is the set $S:=\{n\in\mathbb{N} \mid \text{$n$, $n+1$ and $n+2$ have the same number of divisors}\}$ infinite?
Example: $33\in S$.
I will convert my comment into an answer, since I suspect it is still the state of the art.
The version of your question for two consecutive integers was proved in
Heath-Brown, D. R. (1984). The divisor function at consecutive integers. Mathematika, 31(01), 141-149. ISO 690
See this paper of Hildebrand (the Heath-Brown paper is behind a paywall) for an improvement of Heath-Brown's result.
As Fedor Petrov mentions, your conjecture is very likely true, but is still an open problem (as far as I know). Indeed, your conjecture appears explicitly in Richard Guy's Unsolved Problems in Number Theory (Section 18B). This section also contains a lot of other related conjectures and results. For example, Erdős conjectured that for any $k$, there exist $k$ consecutive integers with the same number of divisors.