If you don't know him, Dr. Lehmiller is a renowned sex researcher. He recently did a study where he looked at the sorts of fantasies which people might have, and found that freaky fantasies are actually fairly common, and that it's not really a big deal.

That is slipped in at the end.

Olives  
We noticed #AI related matters can be a spot to peddle anti-porn pseudo-science. For the past half year or so, I've kept an eye on some discourse. ...

If you are wondering, yes, I have considered using citations a lot more in this post. I'm just wondering if the links would be as accessible.

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If you remember the earlier form of the post, it was basically a bunch of bullet points. As it gets longer, I might do more editing to make it flow better (and maybe add a few more citations, as the links wouldn't be as obtrusive).

If you'd like to see more of a bullet point style over a citation based free form text style, then please say so.

Generally, I'm avoiding linking to third party opinions here (other than avoiding bad takes, I'd like something more concrete), and instead focusing on actual scientific studies.

I added Dr. Lehmiller in as he did a relevant study (and he added useful context). I linked directly to an article written by him on his column in Psychology Today.

I'm aware that third party opinions can attract more interest though, and I've linked to a few of those before. I'm trying to avoid complicating things in this one.

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