• WordPress.com says: “Updates are managed by WordPress.com. This plugin was installed by WordPress.com and provides features that are included in your plan.” That reads like added value that you paid for. In reality, WordPress.com forces the plugin’s users to work as beta testers or guinea pigs on the further development of Gutenberg. Because of the waste of time, I strongly recommend deactivating it.

    • This topic was modified 1 week, 2 days ago by tivolifoto.
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  • @tivolifoto Thank you for your feedback, we appreciate you taking the time to share your thoughts.

    And we’re sorry to hear about your experience. Could you let me know what you were trying to do or set up on your site using Gutenberg? Did an error show up, or something didn’t work as expected?
    We’d love to learn more so we can help and find a solution for you. Let us know about the challenges you’ve faced – we’re happy to help!

    Thread Starter tivolifoto

    (@tivolifoto)

    Three examples:
    The page width of images in articles was not adhered to.
    “Expand on Click” didn’t work for a long time.
    After updating to WordPress 6.7, the galleries were not displayed correctly.

    After deactivating the Gutenberg plugin the errors disappeared.

    The plugin currently seems to be working error-free again. But it took a lot of time with forum posts and support requests until I found the cause.

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