Hello Julian Vu,
Thank you for you helpful & valued feedback. Also thank you for labeling my review as fake. If there was any positive response like: “we would love to investigate this and provide feedback” I would have considered removing the negative review. But seeing as this plugin gets installed on WooCommerce installations which handles peoples credit cards as well as your complete lack of interest. Well rather safe than sorry. Can I prove that it WAS your plugin? No. But the fact that all of this happened minutes after installing this one (with no other modification long before that), well this seems suspicious… All my other plugins are paid and no issues whatsoever. However, if this changes and something comes up indicating that it was not your plugin or you release an update having found the problem and solved. I will do the right thing and remove the negative review and apologize. Until such a time, you are unfortunately stuck with a bad review.
Just note. The thing with Compromiztion as labeled in the title is that it is not necessarily your plugin that does the actual update. It could however potentially provide a gateway for malicious attacks. something you may not even be aware about. I never said YOUR plugin was malicious. What I said was that it compromised my website and gave malicious attacks a way in.
Oh, and another thing – Please enlighten me as to which plugin of mine I am trying to “help better”? This is the whole reason I am writing this “fake” review right? kindly post the link of this plugin. I beg of you.
As per this review from a wordpress developer, This is not the first time this has surfaced:
https://www.ads-software.com/support/topic/code-injector-in-the-plugin-stay-away/
I could understand if I was the only bad review from 100s of good ones but seemingly this is not the case.
Thanks
J
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This reply was modified 7 years ago by joachimpr.
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This reply was modified 7 years ago by joachimpr.