Yes.
When you are being passed you should stay in your lane and maintain your speed.
you should safely change to the right lane
What you should do is nothing. Maintain your speed, don't change lanes, and just let them pass, same as you would do if you were being passed by a car.
keep in the left hand lane
In general, you should keep to the right at all times unless passing, and you definitely should remain in the right lane when traveling below the speed limit.
You should merge into the next lane when it is safe, and do not accelerate in front of another driver. That is a collision waiting to happen.You should merge into the lane by slowly applying the brakes, and when all drivers right next to you have passed, accelerate into the lane, but do not creep into the lane, otherwise the driver in the lane you are merging into will probably collide with you because he was going fast and you were going slow.Accelerating is fine when it is safe, but do not accelerate to get in before another driver can pass by.
remember that wind gusts can move a motorcycle across an entire lane. remember that potholes or railroad tracks often require motorcyclists to change positions within their lane. maintain your lane position and speed when your automobile is being passed by a motorcycle
When you are in a country that drives on the right, then generally you should drive in the right lane; the left lane is for passing. When you are in a country that drives on the left, then generally you should drive in the left lane; the right hand lane is for passing only.
The car you just passed in your rear view mirror (not your side mirror).
. . . signal your intention and make certain you can see the full front of the passed vehicle in your rear view mirror.
Drivers intending to stay on the highway/freeway should stay in the right lane or the lane designated as a through-lane. The only times you should move left is to allow vehicles to merge from a right side on ramp (and move back to the right lane as soon as you can), or to pass slower traffic already in the right lane (then move back to the right lane when it is safe to do so). If a freeway provides a "slower" lane and you drive slower than the maximum speed allowed, you should use the slower lane. But never hog the passing lane just to keep driving in it; move over and let faster traffic pass you.
vertical rectangle, and he should slow down cautiosly and begin to get in the right lane.