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  • Thread Starter marketermatt

    (@marketermatt)

    The simplest solution seems to be just blowing the options in the DB away. I did a search in the wp_usermeta table for ‘%aam%’, found the settings for administrators and updated the database to be a:0:{} which effectively resets the AAM permissions.

    Hi marketermatt,
    The way you did is one of the solutions for your issue.
    Also keep in mind that even if you define yourself as Super Admin, you still are WordPress administrator. It means any changes to Administrator role will affect you too.
    AAM Super Admin is just a virtual role that gives more control over roles through AAM UI.

    Regards,
    Vasyl

    Thread Starter marketermatt

    (@marketermatt)

    Thanks for the response Vasyl.

    Would it work to create another user type called “super admin” and then give that usergroup super admin privileges? Could there be more than one this way?

Viewing 3 replies - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
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