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Time to Rebuild

By Chad Butler 1 Comment

With so many things going on in my life for the past year, this particular site has suffered.  I’ve tried to come back to update plugins and get things rolling again, but there were a number of obstacles in the way.

First, WordPress made some significant upgrades/changes.  It seemed that every time I turned around, there was an update.  Some of these changes definitely impacted my plugins. 

Then there was work.  I had a number of contracted projects that had to be completed.  When people are paying for results, everything else has to get put to the back burner.  Unfortunately, there wasn’t enough cashflow from donations for plugins to drive that to the top of the list.  (But, hey, I don’t blame people for that.  When the plugins don’t work as advertised, as they didn’t due to changes in WP, then why would someone pay for that?  But I digress.)

Lastly, my personal life, which I will not detail here, was in some upheval as well.  But all of these things are now behind me and I am coming back with some renewed vigor.  Part of this is driven by the fact that the neglect of this site has allowed by Google Pagerank to drop – it was as high as 5, which for a little personal project blog, I consider that to be pretty darn good.  I need to rebuild the traffic on this site to what it once was.

In the coming days and weeks, you should see some clear changes.  First, I’ll be updating all three of the plugins available here.  I’ll be reorganizing content and at the same time, attempting to do that in such a way that we get appropriate forwards from previous links.  I hate dead links so that will be addressed.  I would like to also get any unrelated content moved to a more personal blog, so that will follow.  Lastly, if I’m not dead at that point, I want to update the look/feel of the theme.

Since I also intend to expand the consulting end of the business, I will be including a section on how you can hire me to work on your project.  I’ve had enough to keep me busy in the past, but I think I would like to expand on that.

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Filed Under: Web, WordPress Tagged With: WordPress

Rebuilding my plugins

By Chad Butler 4 Comments

I will be rebuilding the Verse-O-Matic and the Affiliate Cloak (ClickBank) plugins.  Around WP version 2.5 some changes were made that caused the installation of these plugins to not work correctly.  Long story short, it centers around the installation of a database table that each of them use.

I will probably utilize the wp_options table rather than put in a new table.  With that, I probably will include an option to completely uninstall the plugin, including emptying the values from the wp_options table.  (Don’t you just hate it when plugins leave huge amounts of data in your database even after you’ve uninstalled them?  I know I do.)

Anyway, this has been bugging me for some time, but I just have not had the time to work on the project.  But I really want to get it fixed so these are useable plugins.  Then I’ll get them moved over to WordPress.org.

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Filed Under: Verse-O-Matic, Web, WordPress Tagged With: clickbank, Verse-O-Matic, WordPress

Delete original WP admin account for additional security

By Chad Butler 2 Comments

Have you recently had your WordPress installation hacked?  Did the hackers fill your theme files with link spam?  If so, you might have spent some time doing an upgrade and clean install of WordPress.  As part of this process, you probably also changed the password you use to login to WordPress.

I had this problem a few months ago and found that changing my password was not enough.  One additional step to fully secure your blog is to delete the original admin account.  If you don’t, it’s probably only a matter of time before you are re-hacked.

By deleting the “admin” login, a hacker now has to figure out an appropriate username AND password combination, making it exponentially more difficult to hack your login.  Hackers know that the default WP installation process leaves you with an administrative username of “admin.”  They can easily make the assumption that most people do not bother to change this and know that they only need to figure out your password.

If you haven’t done this and you are logging in as “admin,” follow these steps:

  1. Login as admin
  2. Create a new user for yourself and give it administrator privileges.
  3. Logout of admin and login under your new administrative username.
  4. Delete the original admin account.
  5. (optional) If you already have been posting on your blog using the original admin account, you can attribute those posts to your new account when you delete the user.

Since you are taking the time to do this, you should also consider using a secure password.  Most people simply use an easy to remember word as their password.  Words are easy to hack, even when they are case sensitive.  There are only so many possible combinations of upper and lowercase letter.  Adding a number or two to your password is better.  This increases the security of the password exponentially as you are increasing the number of possibilities.

But if you REALLY want a secure password, you need a combination of the following:

  1. Upper and Lowercase letters
  2. At least one (1) number
  3. At least one (1) symbol (those do-hickeys above the numbers)

This makes it FAR more difficult for a hacker to figure out your password.  Incidentally, WP 2.5 has added a nice feature in the users panel to tell you the strength of your password.  If you follow the above, it will indicate you have a strong password.

Of course a complete set of random characters would be best, but who can remember that?  So most people rely on a word they can remember.  But words can be hacked with a dictionary cracker.  One little hint to further password strength is to interchange a letter with a number.  This changes your passWORD to a NONword.  For example, if you use a “3” for your “E” (or “e”) then “Bubble” becomes “Bubbl3”.  See how the 3 is a backwards E?  Now add some other numbers and symbols and you have a much stronger password.  1%Bubbl3 is FAR superior to bubble.  And should be just as easy to remember something like “one percent bubble” as it is for just “bubble” but it’s MUCH harder to hack.

These easy steps will make it much harder for you to be hacked again!

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Filed Under: WordPress Tagged With: security, WordPress

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