We have editorial needs, we want collaborators to be able to put inline comments and accept, reject or edit changes.
Caroline
]]>I recently had some changes made to my site on WordPress. Basically I had one guy fixing some code up so we could use SSL (https) and then another guy was fixing up the CDN services.
The funny thing is something got messed up and the site was in a loop. We found out why but both guys said they didn’t do it.
I have my sites hosted on Apache servers.
How can I check the logs and see who made the changes? Basically someone went into the general settings and changed the “Site Address (URL)”
Thanks for all the help in advance!
]]>This is for helping multiple people collaborating on site content. More specifically, it’s to allow an “editor” to provide a review of a draft of content by any one of a number of writers. Then, the writer should be able to go back in and accept certain changes, respond to in-line comments, and so forth (like in Word.)
I know that I can get a side-by-side comparison of two versions of a post in the default features, but I’d like to do more. Anyone have a recommendation? Thanks!
]]>I’m trying to put together what I assume (and hope) is a very simple function, and I’m totally lost.
I have a list of posts, organized by category, and I want to highlight (in a way that I can style by CSS later) recently changed ones. That is, posts whose last modification date was X-days ago. I’ve scoured for plugins, and can’t find one that does the trick. I know WordPress keeps track of post revisions, so I hope this is entry-level stuff, and I’m just too PHP-challenged to sort it out.
Please help! Thank you!
]]>I’m guessing that kind of functionality is not something possible (at least, not yet), but does anyone know of a plugin that comes close (maybe, a little less interactivity)?
Thanks!
]]>I’ve been struggling with a recent hack that seems to be a link injection. I’ve located a number of malicious files, deleted them, and implemented many of the commonly recommended security measures.
However, it seems that I might not have rooted out a bad user since there are many accounts on the site, and it appears that whomever is doing this might be accessing my theme files directly.
I’m just wondering if anyone knows of a plugin like Audit Trail that tracks changes to core and theme files instead of just posts/pages.
Any help would be much appreciated.
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