Plugin malicioso en wp-admin: cómo detectarlo

¿Tu wp-admin muestra una actualización de navegador que no instalaste? Detectá y eliminá el plugin malicioso WordPress wp-admin en menos de 10 minutos.

https://seguridadenwordpress.com/plugin-malicioso-wordpress-wp-admin-actualizacion-falsa/

#pluginmalicioso #wpadmin #fakebrowserupdate #sucuri #malwarewordpress

Plugin malicioso en wp-admin: cómo detectarlo - Seguridad en Wordpress

Sucuri documentó una campaña activa que instala un plugin malicioso en WordPress y muestra popups de actualización falsa exclusivamente a administradores dentro de wp-admin.

Seguridad en Wordpress

Activar 2FA en WordPress con Wordfence 2026

Activar 2FA en WordPress con Wordfence es gratis y toma 5 minutos. Guía completa: instalación, apps compatibles, códigos de respaldo y recuperación de a...

https://seguridadenwordpress.com/activar-2fa-wordpress-wordfence/

#2fa #wordfence #wpadmin #autenticacióndosfactores #seguridadwordpress

Activar 2FA en WordPress con Wordfence 2026 - Seguridad en Wordpress

Cómo activar 2FA en WordPress con Wordfence paso a paso: qué apps usar, cómo guardar los códigos de respaldo y qué hacer si perdés el acceso.

Seguridad en Wordpress

Your WordPress admin is slow. Your host is probably not the problem.

The actual culprits:
- Heartbeat API fires every 15s — that's 240 server requests per hour of editing
- Post revisions accumulating since 2019
- Dashboard widgets from every plugin you've ever installed
- Autoloaded options over 1MB

Fix what you control before blaming infrastructure.

https://makewpfast.com/why-your-wordpress-admin-dashboard-is-so-slow/

#WordPress #WPAdmin #WebDev

Why Your WordPress Admin Dashboard Is So Slow - MakeWPFast

Your frontend loads in 2 seconds, but wp-admin takes 8. Sound familiar? A slow WordPress dashboard is not just annoying — it kills productivity. Every click,

MakeWPFast

Cómo entrar a tu sitio staging de WordPress

Cómo acceder a sitio staging WordPress paso a paso: URL, credenciales, problemas comunes y cómo resolverlos. Guía para developers en 2026.

https://seguridadenwordpress.com/acceder-sitio-staging-wordpress/

#stagingwordpress #wpadmin #entornodeprueba #wpstagingplugin #desarrollowordpress

Cómo entrar a tu sitio staging de WordPress - Seguridad en Wordpress

Guía práctica para acceder a tu sitio staging de WordPress: URLs, credenciales, errores comunes y seguridad del entorno.

Seguridad en Wordpress
Want to shape how the admin menu of #WooCommerce will be strucktured in the future? Join the #discussion
https://github.com/woocommerce/woocommerce/discussions/60481
#openSource #eCommerce #wpAdmin
Proposal: Reorganize WooCommerce admin menus by merchant jobs-to-be-done · woocommerce woocommerce · Discussion #60481

Context: This is a quick writeup in response to a tweet proposing that Woo restructures the top-level menus in WordPress to align more directly with merchant tasks. The four top level menus should ...

GitHub

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

Aligning Automattic’s Sponsored Contributions to WordPress

Automattic has always been deeply committed to the success of WordPress, dedicating significant resources and talent to its development for almost two decades. However, we’ve observed an imbalance …

Automattic
Tjoa... daily business.

#wpadmin
Dislike the new site visibility badge in #WooCommerce since 9.3? Join the issue about how to find a better way:
https://github.com/woocommerce/woocommerce/issues/51588
#Woo #WordPress #WPAdmin #AdminBar
[Enhancement]: Hide site visibility badge if shop is Live · Issue #51588 · woocommerce/woocommerce

Describe the solution you'd like Don't add the site visibility badge to the admin bar if a website/shop is live. For coming soon it's a useful hint. But a shop is expected to spend most of it lifet...

GitHub

Customizing the New Admin Email Confirmation in WordPress

How to use WordPress filters to modify the contents of the email that is sent out when the site’s admin email is changed in the WordPress admin dashboard.

https://shawnhooper.ca/2024/04/02/wordpress-customizing-new-admin-email/

#filters #wpAdmin

Customizing the New Admin Email Confirmation in WordPress - Shawn Hooper

How to change the subject line and body of the confirmation email sent when you attempt to change a WordPress site's admin email address.

Shawn Hooper

Today I was #refactoring some #php code for a #WordPress plugin I use internally, to retrieve #plugins_api data used for my other plugins in various form.

I forgot how painful it can be, trying to respect all of the messy structure of #wpAdmin, while trying to achieve relatively simple tasks.

Didn't encounter any php error, or warning - which is a relief. I had some simple #javaScript errors though.

I wish I've written that #code as modular...

#buildInPublic

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