#Wordpresscom

Nein, wördpress.com, du benutzerfeindlicher scheißhaufen!

Ich will weder eine „jetpack KI-suche“, noch ein „legacy widget“ (was immer das auch sein soll, die linkliste ist darüber jedenfalls nicht verfügbar), noch ein „facebook seiten plugin“, noch „bevorstehende veranstaltungen“, noch „sternebewertungen“, noch eine „X-einbettung“, noch eine „spotify-einbettung“ (schon vom gedanken kommt mir der kaffee wieder hoch), noch sonstwas von eurer bis zur unbenutzbarkeit modernen scheiß-widget-verwaltung ohne suchmöglichkeit für die gefühlt dreihundert einbettungsmöglichkeiten in meine seitenleiste einbetten, sondern einfach nur wieder die links, die ich angelegt habe, die mir immer noch im bäckend angezeigt werden und die eure räudige krüppelscheiße von moppeliger blogsoftwäjhr eben gerade einfach ratzefummel aus der seitenleiste wegradiert hat, als ich aus dem archiv mal etwas weniger platzraubendes machen wollte… also beim bearbeiten noch nicht einmal die links angefasst habe. Und nein, ich habe da auch nicht versehentlich reingeklickt. Vielleicht hat der mauszeiger mal drüber geschwebt, das lässt sich kaum vermeiden, wenn man woanders hinwill… ich sags ja, bis zur unbenutzbarkeit modern ist sie, eure frisch verscheißbesserte krüppelscheiße.

Ist ja voll nett, dass eure scheiß-widget-verwaltung sich jede bearbeitung der seitenleiste gemerkt hat, die ich hier irgendwann von vor rd. achtzehn jahren im jahr 2008 bis eben gerade gemacht habe und dass ich diesen ganzen kram wieder in die seitenleiste zurückschieben könnte, wenn ich mit der unbeschreiblichen zähigkeit dieses vorganges klarkomme. Bis auf die links, die ihr mir mit eurem softwäjhrarschloch eben gerade ratzefummel weggelöscht habt. Ich bin sowas von erfüllt von dankbarkeit, das könnt ihr euch gar nicht vorstellen! Ich möchte am liebsten einen dankbarkeitsschlagring anlegen und sozjales fiehdbäck geben. Benutzt ihre eure scheiße eigentlich selber? 🤮️🤬️🖕️

(Für die vielen menschen, die mit ihrer lebenszeit etwas besseres anzufangen wissen, als sich mit dieser zum schmalspur-CMS aufgemoppelten blogsoftwäjhr aus der lodernden benutzererfahrungshölle rumzuschlagen: so sieht das bearbeiten der seitenleiste für mich aus. Es bedient sich auch auf einem schnellen webbrauser mit guhgells renderingengine auf einem noch gar nicht so alten kompjuter mit vierkernprozessor so unsäglich zähflüssig mit der grazie eines sich aus dem dicken, tiefen schlamm befreienden faultiers und setzt bildschirmauflösungen voraus, die ich schlicht nicht habe. G’tt, wenn es dich gibt, rette meine seele, falls ich eine habe und lass mich nie, nie, nie wieder für irgendwas wördpress benutzen! Schon diese hier aufgenötigte akismet-krüppelscheiße von spämmfilterung ist ein krampf im arsch, und zwar einer, der nach nicht nachvollziehbaren kriterjen fröhlich rumzensiert, wenn mal jemand ein nicht ganz stubenreines wort benutzt hat. Zum glück hat sich da aber noch keiner der anwendung-im-webbrauser-spezjalexperten bei wordpress punkt com darum bemüht, den vorgang des zurückholens durch modernmachen zu erschweren.)

Nein, wo man einen fehler meldet, findet sich auch nicht mehr so leicht. Sonst hätte ich das schon getan, statt hier rumzuranten wie so ein blogger. So ist mir die zeit zu schade.

Wenn ihr da drüben bei scheiß-wördpress-punkt-com mit euren tonnen von überwachungskohd statistiken führt, um mich noch glücklicher zu machen, werdet ihr sicherlich bemerkt haben, dass ich auch euren tollen scheißeditor, den ihr in wördpress reingekackt habt, jedesmal, wenn ich etwas nachträglich verändere, mit drei scheißklicks umgehe und lieber eurer mechanisch angereichertes HTML editiere. Was meint ihr wohl, warum ich das mache? Ja, das geht immer noch schneller und vor allem viel überraschungsfreier als eurer verkackter scheiß-blockeditor. Was meint ihr wohl, wie geil ich das finde, dass ich das jedesmal machen muss, statt es einmal — zum beispiel in meinem benutzerprofil — konfigurieren zu können. Was meint ihr wohl, warum ich mir — damals, als ihr mit euren beglückungsideen für die idiocracy angefangen habt — ein skript zum bloggen geschrieben habe, damit ich meine texte einfach in meinem editor tippen kann, der im gegensatz zu eurem gestrokel wenigstens fehlerfrei ist und nicht ab und an einfach mal texte verschwinden und formatierungen pogotanzen lässt, während er beim markieren eines wortes oder bereiches das editierfenster irgendwie unkontrolliert rumscrollt? Es liegt daran, dass ich schreiben und veröffentlichen will, ohne mich tief zu bücken und euch die blutbesudelten stiefel zu küssen, mit denen ihr euren nutzern in die fresse tretet und dabei „danke, meine herren“ zu sagen.

WordPress.com, ihr seid das meikrosoft des internetzes geworden! Ihr kackt euren anwendern einfach ins gesicht, weil ihr glaubt, dass ihr unentbehrlich geworden seid.

Für die vormals verlinkten webseits hoffe ich mal, dass der fehler in den näxsten sex bis achtundvierzig monaten behoben wird, wenn den entwicklern mal wieder etwas wichtigeres einfällt, als ihren unbenutzbaren blockeditor noch unbenutzbarer zu machen, bedienbare funkzjonalität durch dysfunkzjonale krüppelscheiße zu ersetzen und sie sich wieder auf die beseitigung von fehlern konzentrieren. Ich gebe für heute auf. Das hat mich jetzt wirklich schon genug stunden gekostet, und den größten teil nur, weil ich mich hilflos durch eine benutzerabschreckungsoberfläche gekwält habe.

Oder, um es mit reklamelügnern zu sagen: weil ich eine „benutzererfahrung“ gemacht habe. 😵️

Fickt euch!

#blah #rant #wordpress #wordpressCom

Henri Iamarinoiamarino
2025-11-10
Jeremy Hervejeremy@herve.bzh
2025-11-07

Recommend blogs in the WordPress.com Reader

Over at WordPress.com, we recently added a new feature to the WordPress.com Reader. You can now build a list of blogs you like, and recommend them to others. Here is how one can access recommended blogs, on the web and via the WordPress.com REST API

herve.bzh/recommend-blogs-in-t

Screenshot of the Recommended blogs list on WordPress.comScreenshot of a Recommended blogs list on WordPress.comScreenshot of a request to the Recommended blogs items endpoint on WordPress.comScreenshot of the API response when requesting an export of a list

The Future Divide: novatopflex.wordpress.com vs. novatopflex.com

novaTopFlex has just identified the novatopflex.com domain as a functional domain, and advertisements can now continue to proceed on the site served by Bluehost. From now on, expect novatopflex.wordpress.com to be the public-facing blog of public-facing personal interest, while novatopflex.com shall be the public-facing blog–and more–of business interest, predominantly focused on technology.

2025-10-10

🌎 Sponsor Shoutout | #WCCanada2025

A huge thank you to WordPress.com, our Global Sponsor, for providing everything you need to build, grow, and scale websites—empowering creators, businesses, and innovators worldwide.

#WordPress #WordCampCanada #WCEH2025 #WCEH #WordPressCom

2025-09-20

Visa’s SavingsEdge is a senseless waste of server space

I paid $96 for another year of WordPress.com Premium last week. It could have been less–perhaps as much as 50 percent less–but managment at a site called Visa SavingsEdge apparently had other ideas.

That site, for those who have been blessed with never having to use it, is a cashback portal run by Visa that lets you sign up for rebates on qualifying business credit cards like my Chase United Club card. It was simple to use–you didn’t need to opt in before a particular purchase–and it saved me a decent amount of money from 2021 through the first half of 2024, all from rebates for bookings at MGM hotels in Las Vegas.

But then Visa decided to fix what was not broken from my perspective. “We’re excited to announce that Visa SavingsEdge will be enhanced to provide even more ways to save on your business purchases,” a Feb. 1, 2024 e-mail informed me.

The new site that debuted last summer still provides automatic rebates on in-store purchases but requires you to click through a “Shop Now” link for online cashbacks–and restricts hotel and car-rental cashbacks to bookings made through that site.

The site itself flunks basic usability guidelines, starting with this idiotic requirement: “For security reasons, passwords must be updated every 90 days.” Password expiration polices were dumb when I wrote a column in the Post criticizing them as a dogmatic relic 20 years ago, Microsoft stopped recommending them six years ago, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology’s security guidelines now outright ban them.

Clicking the “Log In” button–and then clicking almost any other navigational element, from a section heading to a “Load more” button below a list of offers–subjects you to a brief delay in which the entire page blurs and a white circle in the middle of it pulses, as if the page is trying to show off how hard it’s working.

I’ve clocked this lag at anywhere from one to seven seconds, with two seconds the most common wait. Which is a long time for any site to remind me of waiting for an interlaced image file to download over a dial-up connection. And like enforcing a password-expiration policy in 2025, the only thing this visual effect does is flaunt hostility to the user.

I’ve also come across an extra level of authentication annoyance: Navigating away from the site and trying to log back in can get me an error message nonsensically informing me that “A session is already open. Please try again later.” But since I am not, in fact, logged in, this leaves me locked out.

All of that still seemed like it would be worthwhile when an Aug. 13 e-mail tipped me off to a 50 percent cashback deal on “qualifying purchases” here–just in time for my annual renewal. But every time I have clicked on a link for this WordPress.com offer on the SavingsEdge site, I have been dumped on a page devoid of any details except for two asterisked items covering Visa’s policies for travel cashbacks.

Maybe my low-end WordPress.com plan wouldn’t have qualified anyway–the one other SavingsEdge offer that features a service I already pay for, Google Workspace, is only good for Business Standard plans. But one thing is clear: Thumbwrestling with this insult to Web design has cost me time that I will never get back.

#businessCreditCard #cashBack #cashback #creditCard #deals #discounts #passwordExpiration #rebate #SavingsEdge #UX #Visa #VisaSavingsEdge #WordPressCom

A photo of the SavingsEdge site a second after I clicked its login button, with everything on it blurred.
WPNEWS.iowpnewsio
2025-09-17

WordPress Patterns let you reuse layouts without rebuilding them every time you publish. That means no more duplicating old posts, fixing headers, or untangling spacing issues every week.
 

ift.tt/hREKcsq

WPNEWS.iowpnewsio
2025-09-15

Newspack publishers can now create custom mobile apps using the Pugpig Bolt plugin.
 

ift.tt/HvJVoIc

2022-10-28

WordPress.com Ads on Free Sites – A Nightmare on Your Main Street

13 July 2025 Scam Ad Warning

Many WordPress.com owners of free sites and some with No Ads upgrades are reporting in the community forums that visitors to their sites are being redirected to scam websites.

Perhaps not entirely coincidental, WordPress.com forum staff advised earlier that due to circumstances beyond their control, they had to change ad partners. However, this was in connection to site owners complaining that their WordAds earnings dropped significantly since the last week of June. (No ads are running or should be running on this site. If you see ads here, please contact me on Mastodon.)

Whatever the reason, be aware that free WordPress.com sites are having an issue at the moment and it’s not the fault of the site owner or your device. Hopefully TPTB will box this bug more quickly.

Not that long ago our knitting guild was considering moving its website to WordPress.com. I half-jokingly mentioned to a fellow guild member that I hoped WordPress.com advertising would never be like on our guild’s current free website, hosted elsewhere, that is covered in more ads per pixel than content. Sadly, it seems the day of the zombie apocalypse has arrived here, too.

I recently followed a link in the forum to a photographer’s free WordPress.com website after he complained that ads were covering his photos. While his issue was malware in his web browser, this horror greeted me on his post while I was logged out. If you can stomach it, click to see a full size screedshot.

The ads you see depend on your location and browsing history, among other things.

Over the years, ads have become more and more flagrant on free websites. The most recent viral infection is “Sponsored Content” by Outbrain, where the hordes sometimes attack in groups of threes and, sometimes, all nine at once. (Lock your windows! Lock your doors!)

On WordPress.com Free and (legacy) Starter plan sites, we sometimes display advertisements on your blog or site to help pay the bills.

WordPress.com Ads – Support Documentation 2022

Then and now…

Back in 2013, WordPress.com started letting site owners know (more graphically!) that they sometimes run ads on free websites (since 2006!) by displaying an info banner where ads would appear. They also provided a link to Tell Me More that explained what this was all about and what our (single) option was.

Ad info banner c. 2013

Shuffling along to 2022 and, well…

Ad info banner c. October 2022-The message is clear

Have you visited a newish Free website recently? Did you spy the top banner promoting sign up for WordPress.com on the site’s front page? You might see that, but the site owner sees an entirely different prompt in that same banner when logged in.

Banner when visiting a free WordPress.com website What the site owner sees on the public side of their site when logged in

Images you insert in your post might open in a special page frame promoting WordPress.com sign up. Sometimes.

Back in April, WordPress.com reiterated its commitment to hosting free websites, so that

“…anyone, anywhere can put up a blog or a site, whatever their situation. With the Free plan you’ll still be able to get the word out, create a beautiful site, and take advantage of the fastest WordPress managed hosting on the planet. And when you’re ready to scale up your ambitions, WordPress Pro* will be waiting in the wings.”

*WordPress.com killed off the Pro plan in July 2022 in favor of its previous plans.

And while that is true, the flip side is that free sites are billboards. You might not need or want to “scale up your ambitions”, but you’ll probably cough up to get those ads off your site* if your site is publicly visible to search engines and the Reader.

(*Update 2 November 2022: WordPress.com recently removed the No Ads Add-On from purchase through the Upgrades dashboard. The only way to remove ads for now is by purchasing an upgrade plan for your site.)

I get that advertising helps keep free sites free, but the recent Outbrain injection brings down the standard for everyone, including WordPress.com itself.

Maybe the next phase of this ad infection is WordPress.com offering an upgrade so you won’t SEE those horrible ads anywhere, ever. (If that happens, you heard it here first!)

N.B. Am I still recommending WordPress.com as a host for folks just starting out? Yes, but. Transparency builds trust.

As always, the information in this post is correct as of publication date. Changes are inevitable.

#advertising #Thoughts #UserExperience #WordPressCom

shocking screenshot of full screen advertisements with a small amount of site content displayingAd Informational banner "Occasionally, some of your visitors may see an advertisement here. Links to Tell Me More and Dismiss this messageAd Informational banner "Occasionally, some of your visitors may see an advertisement here, as well as a Privacy & Cookies banner at the bottom of the page. You can hide ads completely by upgrading to one of our paid plans. Links to Upgrade now and Dismiss message.
2025-07-13

Scam Ad Warning

Many WordPress.com owners of free sites and some with No Ads upgrades are reporting in the community forums that visitors to their sites are being redirected to scam websites.

Perhaps not entirely coincidental, WordPress.com forum staff advised earlier that due to circumstances beyond their control, they had to change ad partners. However, this was in connection to site owners complaining that their WordAds earnings dropped significantly since the last week of June. (No ads are running or should be running on this site. If you see ads here, please contact me on Mastodon.)

Whatever the reason, be aware that free WordPress.com sites are having an issue at the moment and it’s not the fault of the site owner or your device. Hopefully this is a very temporary bug that TPTB will squash quickly.

#advertising #UserExperience #WordPressCom

2025-07-01

WordPress.com is another free blog site. It allows you to create blogs freely. Free blogs will appear with a subdomain extension like example.wordPress.com.

To connect to a custom domain, you should go with a premium plan of WordPress.com. It also helps you to install dozens of premium quality themes on your blog. A separate hosting plan is not required for WordPress.com.

Medium, Google Blogger, and Tumblr are other popular free blog sites.

2025-06-10

Studio by WordPress.com has been my favorite new tool for WordPress. It has pushed a TON of amazing features over the past year, and they really ramped up the development cycle cadence.

This is snappy local environment that anyone looking to try out WordPress, test themes and plugins, or create a robust developer workflow will enjoy. Hats off to Nick Diego for shepherding Studio!

derekhanson.blog/sn/4262/

Data for Breakfastdata.blog@data.blog
2025-05-12

AI-powered Typo Hunting: Trust Your Docs, Readers Will

Our documentation has a trust problem, and I just found 142 reasons why. It started with a silly typo I noticed on one of the pages – something like “cotnact” instead of “contact”.  It was quick to fix, but it got me thinking: are there more?
Third‑party writing assistants are available as browser extensions, and we also have a spelling mistake checker available within Jetpack. With such tools, it’s easy to catch typos when editing pages, BUT it requires being on a specific page in edit mode.

Why it’s a problem

Typos can negatively impact our company’s credibility, giving the impression of negligence or lack of expertise.

Solution

I wanted a better approach—proactive rather than reactive.

Fortunately, WordPress.com public API made it easy to build an automated solution. Leveraging the WordPress.com API, I scanned all Jetpack.com support pages by sending their content to the GPT‑4o model (a multilingual, multimodal generative pre‑trained transformer developed by OpenAI) with this prompt:

prompt = """Your task is to check the provided text in American English for accidental typos. 
List all obvious typo errors in the provided text and propose a replacement.

Do not list any of those:
- punctuation errors,
- grammar errors,
- typos in html attributes,
- typos in code snippets,
- words including HTML special characters.
"""

Results and next steps

I ended up with 142 pages that required our attention. Some of the detected typos may be false positives, some may need a review by a native speaker, but many are accurately identified typos (“Keet”, “Nexdoor”, “perfomance”).

Cleaning up typos in the Jetpack.com documentation – work in progress.

Curious about the technical details? Here’s the code I used:

from openai import OpenAIimport jsonimport requestsimport pandas as pd client = OpenAI() def get_wp_posts(id, type):     # Base URL for the  WordPress.com API request    base_url = f"https://public-api.wordpress.com/rest/v1.1/sites/{id}/posts/?type={type}"     page = 1  # Start from the first page    # List to store the post IDs and URLs    posts_data = []    while True:        # Append the page number to the base URL        url = f"{base_url}&page={page}"        response = requests.get(url)        if response.status_code == 200:            data = response.json()            posts = data.get('posts', [])            if not posts:                break  # Break the loop if no posts are returned             for post in posts:                posts_data.append({'id': post['ID'], 'url': post['URL'], 'content': post['content']})                         page += 1  # Increment the page number for the next request        else:            print(f"Failed to retrieve data: {response.status_code} {response.text}")            break     # Convert list of posts to DataFrame    return pd.DataFrame(posts_data) def find_typos(x):         prompt = """Your task is to check the provided text in American English for accidental typos.     List all obvious typo errors in the provided text and propose a replacement.         Do not list any of those:      - punctuation errors,      - grammar errors,       - typos in html attributes,        - typos in code snippets,       - words including HTML special characters.    """         response = client.responses.create(        model="gpt-4o-2024-08-06",        input=[            {"role": "system", "content": prompt},            {"role": "user", "content": x}        ],        text={            "format": {                "type": "json_schema",                "name": "typos",                "schema": {                    "type": "object",                    "properties": {                        "typos": {                            "type": "array",                             "items": {                                "type": "string"                            }                        },                        "replacements": {                            "type": "array",                             "items": {                                "type": "string"                            }                        },                    },                    "required": ["typos", "replacements"],                    "additionalProperties": False                },                "strict": True            }        }    )    print(response.output_text)     return json.loads(response.output_text) df = get_wp_posts(20115252, "jetpack_support")df["typos"] = df["content"].apply(find_typos)

Your turn, it is.

Typos might seem small, but they speak volumes about professionalism and attention to detail. How confident are you about your own content? Have you thought about doing something similar on your site or blog? What approach did you take? Are you ready to try this method? Or maybe you have AI prompt ideas beyond spell‑checking? Let us know in the comments!

#ArtificialIntelligence #NaturalLanguageProcessing #SemanticSearch #WordPressCom

A screenshot of a Google Sheets document displaying potential typos in Jetpack support articles, including URLs and suggested replacements.
JC John Sese Cuneta 사요한 謝雪矢 🦋youronly.one@bsky.brid.gy
2025-05-09

There's @whtwnd.com for Bluesky users. There's #WriteFreely which is running on many #Fediverse servers. There's #Grav, a flat-file CMS. Or the hosted service s like #Blogger #WordpressCom and #NaverBlog. (Naver Blog is the best.)

2025-04-16

A – Z Challenge: Plugins

When it comes to enhancing the functionality of your self-hosted WordPress blog, the right plugins can make all the difference. Many users find themselves inundated with options, each promising to deliver the same features. However, choosing the Jetpack plugin could be one of the best decisions you make for your website, and here’s why. Why Choose Jetpack? Jetpack isn’t just another plugin; it’s a comprehensive toolkit designed to streamline your blogging experience. Unlike the […]

fedorapancakes.com/2025/04/16/

eicker.news ᳇ tech newstechnews@eicker.news
2025-04-12

»#WordPresscom launches a free, new #AIwebsitebuilder that allows anyone to create a functioning website using an AI chat-style interface.« techcrunch.com/2025/04/09/word #tech #media #news

2025-03-16

Blogiversary

Apparently today was this WordPress.com account’s eighth birthday. Time flies.

Of course the blog itself dates back to 2006, but it’s changes platforms a whole bunch of times. It’s only this latest incarnation that’s celebrating its birthday.

#blog #blogging #wordpressCom

2025-01-29

Navigating WordPress.com Changes: Where did my dashboard go?!

It only took two and a half months since my last post for a major change to happen to our WordPress.com experience.

TPTB (AKA Automattic, WordPress.com’s parent company) decided this month that it will make WordPress.com much closer to the core WordPress experience. They first switched several of our site dashboards to the WP Admin view. This caused the Classic Editor to temporarily disappear. They also turned off the VIEW tab on those same dashboards, which removed the ability to switch between the Default/Calypso view and Classic/WP Admin view.

Then, a few days later they finally announced it officially in this post:

You’ll want to read the entire thing, including comments. (Aside: I haven’t seen that many comments on a WordPress.com News blog post in years. And if you want to leave feedback about the change, there’s currently an open sticky post in our Community forums – now closed.)

Now it’s the Classic/WPAdmin view all the time in those dashboards and there are at least two known issues:

Being a longtime site owner here can sometimes makes me feel like I’m on a roller coaster, especially since this particular site focuses on changes to WordPress.com itself. And there have been a lot of changes, even since 2021. What we really need is stability so we can write and not wrestle with our workflow all the time.

Your thoughts?

As always, the information in this post is correct as of publication date. Changes are inevitable.

#blogging #Calypso #dashboard #Thoughts #UserExperience #WordPressCom #wpAdmin

JenT toot on Mastodon: Overwhelmingly negative comments so far from WPcom site owners on the switch to the WP Admin interface in some of our dashboards (Posts, Categories, Tags, Pages, Comments, Portfolios and Testimonials).
2025-01-24

AI Images in WordPress.com?

Earlier today I inserted an image into a post using the wordpress.com image tag thing. “/img”. 99% of the time I just paste in a link to an image on Flickr and the post editor embeds the photo through magic or something. The other 1% of the time I pull the images off of my phone. This morning though I used the tag and saw something new. There’s an option to have the built in wordpress.com AI thing generate an image for you.

I figured I’d try it out today. I asked it to generate an image of a Jedi Knight petting a kitten while a blues band plays in the background. Success, I guess?

Let’s try another one. This time I’ll add the instructions before I generate the image… how about this:

Generate an image of a hockey player using his stick to fight off a zombie attack at a fast food restaurant

Let us see the results………

Huh… okay… I guess it decided on its own that one of the zombies should also be a hockey player. Everyone appears to be skating without actually wearing skates, though why they would have to skate at a fast food joint is unknown. Is the guy in the back living or just a newly turned zombie. Also, what’s the deal with the teeth on the zombie on the left? Does the AI think that zombies have different teeth than the humans they used to be? That does not compute.

Okay, so there’s a nice little feature that I will only ever use ironically. Okay. I guess.

#Img #aiGeneratedImages #aiImages #aiIsDumb #aiIsStupid #images #wordpressCom

Client Info

Server: https://mastodon.social
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