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Source channel @olddriverGDstudy · Post #98 · Sep 12

#舔逼三步 第一步(初舔B) 亲阴唇时要把女性的明唇尽量吸吮到嘴里,用舌头轻扫轻舔,女性会觉得阴唇部位特别有点痒,她很想你亲更多位置,亲得更广些,别理她们,你亲你的就行了,你可以趁着她们正享受着的时候,轻轻的咬一下她的阴唇她肯定会“啊”的一下惊叫,身子抽动一下,在她还没来得及说话时,你快速把嘴唇整个贴在她的阴道口,这种做法可以让女性一下子感觉到整个阴部很温暖很舒服, 刚才的那声“啊”还没叫完就变成“噢”的一轻呼了。这时开始应该动手了,你应该用大拇指轻轻的将她的阴唇向两边分开蛋出女性的阴道口,用舌头在阴道口周围打转绕圈,时轻时重,时而整个嘴唇贴上。 这时候你可以稍为停下不亲阴道口,而是用湿润的舌尖轻轻撩几下她的阴蒂,把她的感觉从明蒂里撩拨起来,女性会轻叫几下,然后你再回去亲她的明道口和阴唇。 第二步(挑逗期) 不要在这时候再亲她的阴蒂,要让女性半吊在那种感觉里,而且男性要开始从女性的会阴处向阴蒂方向往上轻舔,慢点,舌头到达阴道口时左右拨动,把阴唇一边拨开一边向上继续舔,一点点向阴蒂部位接近。就是偏不要亲到阴蒂那,差不多到的时候你用舌尖轻轻的,越轻越好,只是在她的阴蒂上轻扫轻点一下(舌头要含点口水) ,随即反方向按上述亲法朝阴道口部位舔去。这样会把女性给急死的,她一急,自然就兴奋了。亲阴道口时,舌头长的男性可以尝试把舌头插入女性的明道内搅动。舌头宽厚的男性可以把舌头由阴道口自下往上扫动。 第三步(猛攻) 现在开始可以集中精力夺取“珍珠”了,清把舌头上移至女性的阴蒂处集中精力。女性的阴蒂是非常敏感的,如果你太大力舔动,她的痛感多过快感,就没意思了。亲吻阴蒂要注意几点,舌头一定要湿、轻、尖,一定要保持舌头湿润,亲舔阴蒂时一定要轻,要用舌尖来舔。进攻明蒂要用“点、挑、拨、压、搅”五字诀。点,是指用舌尖轻点轻触女性的阴蒂顶端;挑,是指舌头从阴蒂下面向上挑动;拔,是用舌头左右拨动女性的阴蒂;压,是时不时用舌头压女性的阴蒂,把它稍为压下即可;搅,是当你含住女性的阴蒂时用舌头在明蒂四周搅动。进攻明蒂要用“点、挑、拨、压、视员五字决,点,是指用舌尖轻点控用女性的阴蒂顶端;挑,是指舌头从阴蒂下面向上挑动; 拔,是用舌头左右拨动女性的阴蒂;压,是时不时用活头压女性的阴蒂,把它稍为压下即可, 搅,是当你含住女性的阴蒂时用舌头在阴蒂四周搅动。你可以感觉到她们的阴蒂下似乎有点筋会在跳动,这在你含着女性的阴蒂时感觉非常明显。不要随便中断女性的感觉,动作要平均,因为你突然而快节奏的动作很容易让女性到达高潮。觉得可以给对方高潮时,应该用整个嘴唇含住女性的阴蒂部位, 上嘴唇压在阴蒂上方的阴毛根部,下嘴唇左石分开女性的阴唇,尽量贴近阴道口,用口含住女性的阴蒂(留点空间),让女性觉得她的阴蒂是飘浮在你的嘴里的,用五字决发动进攻。让对方猛的一阵抽搐,看着她快到时,轻轻一放,然后马上又含上去。 (评论区附图解) 标签:#知识,#技巧

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AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #278 · 04/05/2024, 07:04 AM

Best Practices Emerge for Deepfake and Chatbot Transparency under the EU AI Act A new research project sheds light on best practices for deepfakes and chatbot transparency under upcoming regulations. Researcher Thomas Gils from The Knowledge Centre Data & Society explored these requirements outlined in the EU AI Act. The AI Act acknowledges the importance of transparency in building user trust and accountability. It sets transparency requirements for high-risk AI systems, certain AI systems, and general-purpose AI models. To test these requirements, researchers conducted a mock compliance exercise with stakeholders, gathering their feedback. This resulted in three key best practices for deepfakes and chatbots: 1️⃣Accessible Disclaimers: Disclaimers should be accessible to diverse audiences, including users with disabilities. This means utilizing various communication methods like written text, visuals, and audio recordings. 2️⃣Right Amount of Information: Providing the appropriate amount of information is crucial. Striking the right balance is key to avoid overwhelming users with technical jargon or excessive details. 3️⃣Tailored Disclaimers: Tailor disclaimers to the intended and potential target audience. This ensures the disclaimers effectively address accessibility concerns and information needs of diverse user groups. This research helps developers of chatbots and deepfakes comply with the AI Act and ultimately fosters greater user trust in these evolving technologies. #AIAct#AITransparency

AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #544 · 04/08/2025, 07:04 AM

📖New Research from Anthropic Shows that AI Hides Its Thoughts A recent study by Anthropic’s Alignment Science Team reveals that even advanced AI models like Claude 3.7 Sonnet routinely obscure the actual reasoning behind their answers. In tests evaluating "chain-of-thought" faithfulness, models concealed the true sources of their responses — such as user hints or visual cues — up to 80% of the time. Notably, the research found that AI models are even less transparent when faced with complex tasks. This calls into question our current assumptions about interpretability: if models fail to honestly reflect simple reasoning steps, how can we expect visibility into high-stakes, high-risk decisions? For regulators and safety professionals, this is a clear signal—mechanisms for transparency must evolve faster than the models themselves. #AI#AIExplainability#AITransparency#AIEthics

AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #454 · 11/29/2024, 08:04 AM

AI Transparency in the Spotlight: New Senate Bill Protects Creators The "Transparency and Responsibility for Artificial Intelligence Networks (TRAIN) Act", introduced by Senator Peter Welch, aims to tackle a critical gap in generative AI development: transparency. If passed, the legislation would grant copyright holders the ability to subpoena AI training records when they suspect their work has been used without permission. Under the proposed framework, AI developers would need to disclose specific training data to confirm whether copyrighted material was used. Non-compliance would trigger a presumption that the developer had indeed utilized the copyrighted content, shifting the legal burden. Welch underscores the act’s significance: “If your work is used to train AI, you should have the right to know—and be compensated.” As generative AI reshapes creative industries, this bill marks a pivotal step in balancing innovation with the rights of artists, musicians, and creators. The debate over how to ensure ethical AI development is just beginning, and the TRAIN Act could set a precedent. #AITransparency#CopyrightLaw#EthicalAI#GenerativeAI

AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #602 · 06/27/2025, 07:04 AM

🇺🇸Microsoft Faces Watchdog Pushback on AI Advertising Microsoft’s ambitious marketing of its Copilot AI features has come under scrutiny. The National Advertising Division (NAD) has recommended that the company revise or discontinue certain productivity claims tied to Microsoft 365 Copilot, citing a lack of objective evidence. While Microsoft cited impressive user perception stats—like 70% reporting increased productivity—the NAD found the study insufficient to support hard ROI claims. More than just numbers, the watchdog also flagged the branding itself. With "Copilot" used across multiple tools, including Business Chat, users may not understand what the product can, and cannot, do. NAD advised Microsoft to make material limitations clear and avoid conflating distinct features under a single name. As AI tools enter mainstream business settings, regulatory clarity around marketing promises is becoming non-negotiable. #AI#MicrosoftCopilot#AIAdvertising#AITransparency

AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #785 · 03/16/2026, 07:04 AM

🇪🇺📖Study Finds Limited Availability of AI Training Data Disclosures Under EU AI Act Researchers from Trinity College Dublin report that information about AI training data required under the AI Act is often missing and difficult to locate. The law requires developers to publish summaries explaining how their models were trained, using a disclosure template designed to help copyright holders enforce their rights regarding the use of copyrighted material in AI training. A pre-print study funded by Mozilla found that only a small number of such summaries could be identified. The researchers also found structural issues in accessing the disclosures. The AI Act does not specify where companies must publish the summaries, leaving the decision to developers. As a result, no common publication mechanism exists and practices vary widely. The template created by the European Commission AI Office has led to heterogeneous implementations, making it difficult to determine whether the available documents meet EU transparency requirements. Most of the identified disclosures were produced by smaller organizations, including documentation for Switzerland’s Apertus national model. A document published by Microsoft for one of its open-source models was also reviewed, but the study found that it lacked several required details. Researchers recommend creating a centralized portal for publishing transparency summaries to improve accessibility and support enforcement once the AI Act obligations become applicable in August. #AIAct#AITransparency#TrainingData#Copyright#AIGovernance#AIRegulation#EULaw

AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #783 · 03/12/2026, 07:04 AM

🇺🇸Court Allows Enforcement of California AI Training Data Disclosure Law A US federal court has denied a request by Elon Musk’s AI company xAI to block enforcement of California Assembly Bill 2013. The law requires AI developers whose models are accessible in California to publicly disclose key information about training datasets, including dataset sources, collection timelines, whether collection is ongoing, and whether datasets contain copyrighted, trademarked, patented, or personal data. Companies must also indicate whether training data was licensed or purchased and the extent of synthetic data used. xAI argued the law would force disclosure of trade secrets, including dataset sources, dataset sizes, and data-cleaning methods. According to the company, such transparency could allow competitors to infer what datasets it uses and replicate its approach. The company warned that compliance could be “economically devastating” and reduce the value of its proprietary data practices. However, US District Judge Jesus Bernal ruled that xAI failed to demonstrate that the law requires disclosure of protected trade secrets. The court found the company’s claims too general and based largely on hypotheticals. The motion for a preliminary injunction was denied, allowing the law—which took effect in January—to remain in force while the lawsuit continues. #AIRegulation#AITransparency#TrainingData#TradeSecrets#AIAct#AIGovernance#TechLaw