Gift Exchange Took a Wild Turn

So, D20. I decided to gift my best friend something unforgettable for New Year’s—my virginity. Packed my bags, traveled to his city, and, well, we got down to business. Shit was good, no complaints. But guess what? Turns out he had a little surprise for me in return. Not jewelry, not flowers, but two damn lines on a pregnancy test. Talk about a holiday shocker!

#unexpected #holidaysurprise #wtf #lifechanging

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The Depraved Life-Saver

Listen up, we’ve got this CPR dummy in class, a creepy-ass mannequin meant for practicing mouth-to-mouth. But if you’ve got any street cred, you’d know to straight-up refuse to perform on this cursed thing. Better to take the failing grade than touch it. Why, you ask? ‘Cause the word on the street is that our sicko instructor’s been getting way too intimate with this dummy, using its plastic mouth for some unholy deeds...

#twisted #wtf #urbanlegend #creepy

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She went wild, getting banged left and right!

So, I finally got down and dirty on New Year’s with a buddy of mine... I’m 22, by the way, held out for a damn long time. Used to just tease with some blowjobs, never let anyone go all the way. But holy shit, I loved it so much that I’ve already fucked three different dudes, including a hot 34-year-old stud! 🤣

#wildnight #firsttime #unleashed #nsfw

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🚀 Leveling up my Linux game on day 10!
Explored the art of user accounts and group management – like crafting a digital fortress 🏰 to control access and boost security.
Vital for cloud empires and corporate realms, ensuring seamless ops and ironclad protection. Who's ready to gatekeep their systems? 💪

🔗 https://www.roastdev.com/post/....diving-into-linux-es

#linuxaccesscontrol #secureusergroups #systemadminessentials #digitalfortresstips #enterpriselinuxmastery

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Diving into Linux Essentials: Handling Accounts and Teams on My Tenth Day

Hey there, if you've been following along with my Linux adventure, you know that yesterday we dug into how the system identifies itself, deals with privileges, and handles software installs. Today, on what I'm calling my tenth step in this journey, I zeroed in on something every Linux pro needs to master: organizing who gets in and what they can do through accounts and teams. It's like being the bouncer at a high-stakes party—especially in setups like cloud systems or big company networks where keeping things locked down is non-negotiable for safety and smooth operations.Core Skills I Picked Up and Tried OutDealing with Individual Accounts on LinuxI kicked things off by exploring the nuts and bolts of how Linux keeps track of people logging in and verifies they're legit.Here are the main tools I got familiar with:useradd – This one's for setting up a fresh account from scratch.passwd – Use it to assign or update someone's login secret.su – Lets you hop into another account, even the superuser one.userdel – Wipes out an account when it's no longer needed.Putting these to work really clicked for me on stuff like:The process behind adding new folks and checking their credentials.That unique number tag, the UID, which sets each person apart.How the system doles out or restricts what each individual can touch.Why it's smart to clear out old accounts to avoid sneaky vulnerabilities.Organizing Teams and Access RightsNext up, I learned how Linux bundles people into teams to make sharing access way easier, particularly when a bunch of them need the same level of entry to files or tools.The key commands I practiced include:groupadd – Builds a new team category.groupdel – Gets rid of a team that's outlived its usefulness.gpasswd -a username group – Slots someone into a specific team.gpasswd -d username group – Boots them out of that team.From this, I grasped some vital points:Teams turn permission handling into something that grows without chaos.Anyone can join several teams at once for flexible setups.This approach shows up a ton in real-world servers for efficient teamwork.Smart team oversight boosts both protection and group productivity.The Real Value Behind All This Account and Team StuffGrasping these ideas is a game-changer because:Linux is built for handling multiple people at the same time.In cloud environments, you've got admins, programs, and automated services all needing their own entry points.Messing up on permissions can open doors to serious threats.A lot of troubleshooting in DevOps or live systems boils down to fixing access glitches.What Stuck with Me from Day 10This session really solidified my grip on the building blocks of Linux security and how to control who's allowed where.Now I'm confident about:Building and overseeing accounts effectively.Jumping between accounts without risks.Granting or pulling back team-based rights.Ensuring everything stays tidy and fortified against unauthorized pokes.