Instead of watching an hour of Netflix, watch this 2 hour hour Stanford lecture will teach you more about how LLMs like ChatGPT and Claude are built than most people working at top AI companies learn in their entire careers.
Instead of watching an hour of Netflix, watch this 2 hour hour Stanford lecture will teach you more about how LLMs like ChatGPT and Claude are built than most people working at top AI companies learn in their entire careers.
🌈 Top 30 LGBTQ+ (Gay) Movies to Watch – Part 2 🎬
1. Your Name Engraved Herein (2020)
2. The Thing About Harry (2020)
3. Mario (2018)
4. Hidden Kisses (2016)
5. Akron (2015)
6. Fair Haven (2016)
7. Esteros (2016)
8. Giant Little Ones (2018)
9. Just Friends (2018)
10. 4th Man Out (2015)
11. In from the Side (2022)
12. Summer of 85 (2020)
13. Those People (2015)
14. Boys in the Band (2020)
15. The Miseducation of Cameron Post (2018)
16. Edge of Seventeen (1998)
17. Get Real (1998)
18. Latter Days (2003)
19. Beautiful Thing (1996)
20. Jeffrey (1995)
21. Trick (1999)
22. Bent (1997)
23. The Broken Hearts Club (2000)
24. Eating Out (2004)
25. Another Gay Movie (2006)
26. Were the World Mine (2008)
27. Big Eden (2000)
28. But I'm a Cheerleader (1999)
29. Closet Monster (2015)
30. Land of Storms (2014)
An HIV positive person on treatment and has reached undetectable viral load can not sexually transmit HIV to there partners even if they have unprotected sex. This is the reason some of you are still testing negative even after been married to HIV+ partners or in discordant relationship.
How risky is a single exposure to HIV? The answer depends entirely on the route.
Here is the breakdown of the estimated risk per 10,000 exposures. 👇
1. Sexual Transmission
Receptive Anal: 138 (~1 in 72)
Insertive Anal: 11 (~1 in 909)
Receptive Vaginal: 8 (~1 in 1,250)
Insertive Vaginal: 4 (~1 in 2,500)
Oral Sex: Extremely low / Negligible
2. Sharing Injection Equipment: 63 (~1 in 159).
3. Needlestick (Healthcare): 23 (~1 in 435).
4. Blood Transfusion: 9,250 (The highest risk, but extremely rare due to modern screening).
Note: You cannot get HIV from spit, sweat, tears, or casual contact like hugging/sharing a toilet seat.
The numbers above assume no protection. However, we have tools today that can bring those risks down to ZERO