Stainless into alloy you need alumslip
I believe above is wrong, but I'm going only by my own experience. I'm no metallurgist, but I believe aluminium paste would improve electrical contact between the metals and may well aggravate the problem.
Copper works because its index is on the low side of stainless. When sandwiched between aluminium and stainless it effectively cancels out the battery (galvanic) effect. Nickel would be better and available for high temperature anti seize pastes.
http://www.inoxbolt.co.uk/zen/index.php?main_page=page&id=2
They also say that stainless is fine for disc and caliper mounts because it's stronger then the base aluminium metal. No need for quick corrode high tensile fasteners.
Anodic index -
Nickel, solid or plated, titanium, Monel -0.30
Copper, low brasses or bronzes; silver solder; German silvery high copper-nickel alloys; nickel-chromium alloys -0.35
18% chromium type corrosion-resistant steels -0.50
Aluminum, cast alloys other than silicon type, cadmium, plated and chromate -0.95
Graphite -1.0
My bike had a dry stainless bolt on the side carrier clamps. Trying to move it made zero attempt to turn and simply sheared off. The other side was galvanised steel which came out but looked ropey. Both were replaced with stainless and a good quality copper/graphite grease. There has been no sign of corrosion since then. I believe the copper and graphite being above and below the indices of stainless and aluminium just short the "battery".
My front cover was a mess under the paint. The very worst was under the alternator belt cover where the steel bottom screw had reacted and corrosion spread under the paint. Other exposed (ferrous) screws had also reacted with the aluminium. Belt cover fretting away at the paint hadn't helped. I filed off the thin flange so the cover only touches under its screws.
The refinished cover was fitted with stainless screws with copper washers and coated with end to end with copper/graphite paste. A year later living near the sea, there are no signs of any corrosion.
These were my crash bar bolts - plated ferrous bolts into stainless steel, fitted dry by BMW showing how important it is to get paste all the way up. I replaced with stainless and the usual anti seize paste. No galling thankfully.