EDITS.WS

Category: wptavern.com

  • WordPress Contributors Discuss How Core Can Better Enable AI Innovation

    As AI-powered technology is rapidly evolving to exponentially extend human capabilities, WordPress contributors do not want the platform to get left behind. AI-powered website creation could even become a threat to its existence, more than a competing CMS, if WordPress doesn’t ensure the platform is easily pluggable for AI-powered extensions. A new discussion on the Core developer’s blog asks what WordPress can do to better enable AI innovation.

    “WordPress Core always seeks to provide a stable foundation for folks to build upon directly and extend as they see fit,” Automattic-sponsored core contributor Anne McCarthy said. “Even if a new technology is not actually included in Core, the project aims to enable innovation and progress through extension (plugins, themes, etc.) wherever possible and sensible.”

    McCarthy shared a video of what it might look like to have AI integrated into Gutenberg’s experimental command center to build out pages based on AI-suggested designs. She asked three questions of contributors:

    • How would you want to see Core updated so it can be extended in ways accessible to AI technologies?
    • For those  building, or trying to build, with AI today, how does Core currently enable or hinder this effort?
    • Are there any concerns that you think the community should be aware of as this space is explored?

    WordPress co-founder Matt Mullenweg is optimistic about the prospect of further integrating AI into open source development.

    “In 2015 I told you to learn Javascript deeply,” Mullenweg said last month in the Post Status Slack. “I don’t have a catchy phrase yet, but my message for 2023 will be to spend as much time leveraging AI as possible. The boosts to productivity and capability are amazing. This is not a web3/crypto/widgets hype cycle. It’s real.”

    Mullenweg also encouraged WordPress professionals to consider how AI and open source can work together.

    “Open source and AI are the two mega-trends of the next 30 years,” he said. “They complement each other, and you should think deeply about how. ChatGPT can’t ready Shopify’s code.”

    StellarWP-sponsored contributor Matt Cromwell commented on the latest core discussion, suggesting that AI innovation is better left to plugin developers.

    “All AI options currently require integration with a 3rd party system, some sort of pricing and authentication, this feels to me to clearly be plugin territory,” Cromwell said.

    “The other concern here is that the current Core roadmap is very full. At what cost would the project chase an AI integration? At the expense of multi-editing collaboration features? At the expense of multi-lingual features? I find it hard to imagine pursuing the current roadmap with excellence and stability AND adding a huge AI integration as well.”

    Bluehost-sponsored contributor Jonathan Desrosiers, one of the reviewers of the post, clarified that the intention was to “fuel discussion around what AI looks like in the WordPress ecosystem and how that may be blocked currently.”

    “As you said, the roadmap is definitely full and adding new things should not be done unless there are extremely compelling reasons,” Desrosiers said. “But, if there are small “paper cut” changes that can be made in Core (new filter or action hooks, etc.) to allow plugins to better experiment and flesh out AI integrations in the WordPress world, I think that we certainly should consider these.”

    Cromwell suggested WordPress could add a settings panel for integrating various API’s, such as payment gateways and OpenAI API keys, to prevent conflicts and streamline API usage across multiple plugins.

    Rob Glidden proposed that contributors consider the possibility of having AI chatbots as a user type for the future collaboration workflow inside WordPress:

    I would suggest looking at AI chatbots as (“just another”) user type in the upcoming Phase 3 of collaboration/workflow.

    I for one want an AI chatbot on my multiuser collaboration team in a phase 3 WordPress.

    In the multiuser collaborative workflows already described in “Phase 3 Collaboration” it seems like basically the same infrastructure should work for both human users and AI “users”.

    Indeed, it is not a huge stretch in reading that document to think of “users”, “collaborators”, and “creators” as also being bot-ish users, assigned and performing tasks within a workflow.

    CodeWP-sponsored contributor James LePage echoed Cromwell’s concerns that focusing too much on integrating AI might make WordPress less competitive on the features that have already been identified for Gutenberg’s Phase 3 roadmap:

    As some others said here, as a WP user, I’d much prefer a really strong focus on the existing Phase 3 roadmap items as I think it would make our CMS a lot more valuable and competitive to other tools out there, as opposed to integrating AI somehow.

    One other thing is that there aren’t really any standards here. There are large players, but they keep changing the way their AI works, and probably will continue to do so. We’d be trying to hit a moving target.

    As much as WordPress contributors are spread thin across the project’s current Gutenberg roadmap of goals and improvements, you don’t get to choose when new technology is bearing down on your industry, forcing you to act or become obsolete. The WordPress community has built a robust plugin ecosystem, but leaving it all to third-party integrations may not be enough to keep the software relevant in the coming years. Ensuring that WordPress is compatible with the future of AI-powered innovation is critical if contributors want the platform to continue to be the best CMS and website builder available on the web.

  • Advanced Custom Fields Plugin Patches Reflected XSS Vulnerability

    Advanced Custom Fields (ACF) has patched a reflected XSS vulnerability that affects versions 6.1.5 and below of ACF and ACF Pro, potentially impacting more than 2+ million users. It was discovered by Patchstack researcher Rafie Muhammad in February 2023, and patched by ACF developers in version 6.1.6 in April.

    Patchstack published a security bulletin and Muhammad described the vulnerability as follows:

    This vulnerability allows any unauthenticated user to steal sensitive information for, in this case, privilege escalation on the WordPress site by tricking a privileged user to visit the crafted URL path. 

    The vulnerability was given a high severity CVSS score of 3.1. Muhammad outlined a proof of concept in the security bulletin. At this time, the vulnerability is not known to have been exploited. ACF free and ACF Pro users should update to the latest 6.1.6 version of the plugin as soon as possible.

  • Gutenberg 15.7 Adds Site Logo Upload to Inspector Controls

    Gutenberg 15.7 was released this week, adding Site Logo upload and replacement from the inspector controls sidebar. This feature is still available in the block toolbar but it feels like a natural addition to the inspector, as it was previously available in a similar fashion in the Customizer. Here users can easily adjust the logo width and set whether the image links to home, opens in a new tab, and more.

    Version 15.7 changed the behavior of the top toolbar fixed setting to address a few issues outlined by Gutenberg lead architect Matias Ventura.

    “The top toolbar has stagnated a bit while the feature set of the editor has evolved,” Ventura said. He identified the two most important issues this design change solves – the lack of a parent selector for nested blocks and the overall increase in the editor’s UI footprint. The toolbar has been updated in the following ways:

    • updates on desktop sized viewports the position of the fixed toolbar
    • updates the z-index of the interface header to be lower to that block toolbar shows up on top
    • implements a toggle expanded/collapsed for block contextual toolbar
    Image Source: PR updating Top Toolbar fixed setting

    This change will require feedback from Gutenberg plugin users, as feedback among contributors has been mixed so far. WordPress core committer and accessibility contributor Andrea Fercia weighed in on the PR, suggesting it requires more testing:

    A11y-wise there are more issues with this implementation at the point that I wouldn’t know where to start. Some quick testing with the keyboard surfaces only some of the most evident ones. I’d encourage everyone to test this new UI with the keyboard first to get an idea of the main issues so that we can continue the conversation with some more context.

    On top of keyboard navigation, there are other issues related to the NavigableToolbar ARIA toolbar usage, placement of elements in the DOM, usage of the icons, etc.

    If you have been following the progress on the experimental Command Center, introduced in version 15.6 as a quick search for jumping to other pages or templates, the design has been updated to match new mockups. Users will notice subtle differences, like tweaks to the radius and borders, icons for each command, and results only available when the input is not empty.

    image source: PR #49681

    A few other highlights from version 15.7 include the following:

    • Duotone filter controls added to block sidebar (Prior to this change, the only place to edit the duotone filters was on a block level.)
    • Fluid typography updated to scale large fonts down for smaller screens using a logarithmic scale factor to calculate a minimum font size
    • Image placeholders now show custom borders
    • Template pattern suggestion modal now uses a masonry layout

    Check out the Gutenberg 15.7 release post and changelog for more details on all the changes in tooling, code quality, performance, accessibility, documentation, and more.

  • Caseproof Acquires WishList Member

    Caseproof, makers of MemberPress, has acquired WishList Products, the parent company of WishList Member and CourseCure. The Wishlist team, with the exception of co-founder Tracy Childers, will continue supporting and developing the products under the leadership of Caseproof founder Blair Williams.

    WishList Member is one of the longest running WordPress membership plugins with a 14-year history. The plugin has been downloaded and activated on more than 119,275 membership and community sites since 2008. Pricing currently ranges from $149.50/year to $249.50/year.

    “WishList Member was a pioneer,” Williams said. “It was the first membership plugin I ever used, and it really inspired me to get more involved with WordPress.

    “It showed me that a plugin could be a powerful catalyst, capable of transforming WordPress into a highly sophisticated membership platform.

    “Ever since then (and all the while growing my own membership plugin, MemberPress), I’ve had a soft spot for WishList Member – and its founders.”

    Caseproof has been scooping up smaller WordPress membership plugins lately, adding MemberMouse to its products earlier this year.

    “To be 100% clear, as with MemberMouse and MemberPress, our goal is not to discontinue WishList, or to combine it with another membership plugin,” Williams said.

    The most significant change coming to WishList Member as part of the acquisition is that the CourseCure LMS features will be rolled into the plugin. Those who purchase WishList Member now will get access to CourseCure for free. Childers said once the plugins are combined the price will go up. The company plans to deliver the same level of support and is not planning to change prices for existing customers.

  • WordPress Themes Team Releases Stacks: A Community Theme for Building Slide Decks

    WordPress’ Themes Team has released a new block theme called Stacks as part of the Community Themes initiative proposed earlier this year. The goal is to bring together representatives of the team to build block themes year round, the same way that default themes are built and officially supported.

    Stacks was designed for one purpose – to create slide decks that can be used for a presentation. It was designed and built by Saxon Fletcher with help from Automattic-sponsored contributor Ben Dwyer.

    The theme includes a simple setup flow. After installing Stacks and clicking ‘Customize,’ the user is taken to the Site Editor where a set of five slides is already pre-filled on the home page in a warm and inviting color palette.

    Slides can also be created on any post or page using the “Stacks” pattern. After creating a new page, the user is presented with the option to start the page by inserting the Stacks pattern. This loads the same five sample slides that are included on the home page by default. They can be easily edited so that any page or post contains its own unique slide deck.

    The Stacks theme looks just as good on mobile as it does on desktop, making it easy to follow along from different devices.

    The theme was built for a small niche use case – people who want to host their own slides – and is not likely to be widely adopted but presents an interesting use of the block editor for creating slides. Some users may find this to be more user friendly than working with a third-party application to build their presentations.

    Since a different deck can be hosted on each page or post, someone who wants to create a website devoted entirely to hosting their own slide presentations could easily save them all in the same place, share links to the different decks, and avoid having to use a hosted service that may not be around forever.

    Stacks is available for free on WordPress.org and users can expect these Community Themes to have some level of support as they are being hosted by the official WordPress.org account.

  • WordPress Marketing Team Launches “From Blogs to Blocks” Campaign Ahead of 20th Anniversary

    WordPress’ Marketing team has launched a new campaign called “From Blogs to Blocks” in anticipation of the project’s upcoming 20th anniversary. The WordPress community is celebrating this major milestone through various activities and local meetups that are being held around the world throughout the month of May.

    “From Blogs to Blocks creates intentional moments for the WordPress community to reflect on the journey we’ve gone on so far and to dream of what’s to come,” Marketing team contributor Sé Reed said.

    “Each daily action symbolizes the millions of individual actions that have come together to make WordPress what it is today.”

    The new campaign will feature 20 days of WordPress-related prompts for users to engage in different actions designed to start conversations and stir memories. Daily prompts will be published for different ways of participating through blogging, developing, designing, photography, and community. For example, participants may be invited to submit photos to the WordPress Photo Directory, post videos, art, or share a block or theme they created.

    The daily prompts will begin May 7 and will run until the 20th anniversary on May 27. They will give the community an opportunity to reflect on what WordPress means to them, their experiences, and personal milestones along the way.

    Participants are encouraged to use the #WP20 hashtag and may be eligible to receive recognition from the Marketing team in the form of a WordPress.org profile badge. Those who publish contributions on all 20 prompts before WordCamp US in August may also receive additional unspecified acknowledgments. Subscribe to the Marketing blog to get all the prompts in your inbox.

  • #74 – Ahmed Kabir Chaion on How to Find Your Place in WordPress Even if You Don’t Code

    Transcript

    [00:00:00] Nathan Wrigley: Welcome to the Jukebox podcast from WP Tavern. My name is Nathan Wrigley.

    Jukebox is a podcast which is dedicated to all things WordPress. The people, the events, the plugins, the blocks, the themes, and in this case finding a place in the WordPress community as a non coder.

    If you’d like to subscribe to the podcast, you can do that by searching for WP Tavern in your podcast player of choice. Or by going to WPTavern.com forward slash feed forward slash podcast. And you can copy that URL into most podcast players.

    If you have a topic that you’d like us to feature on the podcast, I’m keen to hear from you, and hopefully get you, or your idea, featured on the show. Head to WPTavern.com forward slash contact forward slash jukebox, and use the form there.

    So on the podcast today, we have Ahmed Kabir Chaion.

    As you’ll hear in the podcast, Ahmed has a genuine love of the WordPress community. He’s been an organizer at multiple WordPress events, including WordCamp Asia, the WordPress Accessibility Day. WordFest Live, WordCamp Santa Clarita, and the WordPress Translation Day.

    As if that were not enough, he’s also served as the co-organizer of the Dhaka WordPress meetup chapter, is a former Design Team rep, and a current Polyglots Team rep. Like I said, Ahmed is really engaged in the WordPress community, but how did all this happen? The podcast today focuses on Ahmed’s journey into WordPress.

    Given Ahmed’s involvement in the recent WordCamp Asia, we start the discussion there, talking about how the event went and what plans there are for next year.

    We then get into what the WordPress community is like in the city of Dhaka and Bangladesh as a whole. Technology has become a popular career option, and WordPress is playing a crucial role in that. We talk about how the community is growing, particularly through local meetups.

    The rest of the podcast is all about how you can find a place in the WordPress community no matter what your strengths are. Maybe you’re into writing code or SEO. Perhaps marketing or translations or more your thing. Ahmed lays out the multitude of paths that you can take to engage and give back to the project.

    You don’t need to feel you’ve got to be an expert. The project needs people working at every level, and maybe there’s work to be done which you did not know about. That’s certainly Ahmed’s experience.

    He tells us how we got started just by showing up repeatedly, slowly working out areas where he thought his contributions would be most valuable.

    We talk about some of the places Ahmed has frequented online, and some people he’s been most influenced by.

    It’s a lovely tale of a community member who is truly inspired to make the project better.

    In places, the quality of Ahmed’s audio is a little poor. But it’s more than listable, especially given how enthusiastic Ahmed is.

    If you’re interested in finding out more, you can find all of the links in the show notes by heading to WPTavern.com forward slash podcast. Where you’ll find all the other episodes as well.

    And so without further delay, I bring you Ahmed Kabir Chaion.

    I am joined on the podcast today by Ahmed Kabir Chaion. Hello, Ahmed.

    [00:04:08] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Hi Nathan. How are you?

    [00:04:09] Nathan Wrigley: I am so pleased that we’ve got you on the podcast today. We don’t usually reveal about the technical gremlins, but we did have some technical gremlins, so much so that a previous podcast recording we abandoned, and we’ve come back today to try again.

    So firstly, Ahmed, really fully appreciate you sticking with the process and helping me get this podcast episode out. I really appreciate it.

    [00:04:32] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Thank you, Nathan.

    [00:04:33] Nathan Wrigley: You’re very welcome. So you’re on the podcast today. We’re going to talk about open source contributions and who might do that, and how you might do that. And indeed, what you might do, whether you are a coder or a non coder.

    But Ahmed, just before we begin, we always typically ask the podcast guests to spend a moment just telling the audience about who they are, where they’re from, what they’ve been involved within the WordPress space. So may I ask you that question? Just tell us a little bit about yourself and how you relate to WordPress.

    [00:05:03] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Absolutely. So my name is Ahmed and I’m from Dhaka, Bangladesh. I started my WordPress journey in 2009 for a university project. And then I shifted into my major, which was network security. I graduated from Central Queensland University in Australia. From 2010 to 2019, nine years, I was not involved with WordPress by any means, not even professionally.

    I came back to Bangladesh in 2016, and in 2019 when I switched my workplace, I joined a company called weDevs, from where I actually got involved into WordPress on a full-time basis. And I found that there are some voluntary options, opportunities, and scopes where people can go in and improve WordPress as it is.

    Now, not being a programmer or someone who likes to code myself, I was looking for ways to contribute to the project. And then, during the covid lockdown March in 2020, I started going through the handbook and other articles, blogs, tutorials that you can find in the internet possibly, to getting involved in the wordpress.org side of things.

    And slowly I started to see that it’s not always about writing codes and, going through the major release. And I started learning more about the Make WordPress Team. And then I found that there are many teams where I can get involved and I can start slowly be a regular.

    So I started with the marketing team, then went to documentation, and so on. Late 2020, one of the team reps for the design team suggested that I could also be a team rep. And being team rep did not have to be something that requires me subject knowledge or extraordinary skills, it can be something that I’m committed to giving back. And that’s where I basically fell in love with giving back to the community. Voluntary work for open source and so on.

    And gradually attended online WorkCamps. Became a co-organizer of my local WorkCamp, and Meetup as well. And then I organize online WordCamps. Just a month back, I was part of the organizing team for WordCamp Asia and so on. I feel like my journey has only started Nathan.

    [00:07:32] Nathan Wrigley: That’s great. We share show notes, so Ahmed has shared me a variety of different things that he’s been involved with, and really over the last couple of years, during the pandemic and obviously subsequently with things like WordCamp Asia, there’s a whole laundry list of things that you’ve been involved in.

    So we mentioned WordCamp Asia, Accessibility Day. You’ve been involved in WordFest Live, and a whole bunch of other things. There’s a great big laundry list. So, firstly, thank you. The project doesn’t move forward without people such as yourself. So we’re in your debt for taking so much on in the recent past.

    [00:08:07] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Thank you so much. I guess recognition is something that motivates people, but personally I am happy to continue as much as long as I can, because I considered this as a privilege. That I’m able to give back to the project and also collaborate with many folks across the world. So I think it’s a privilege for me be able to give back.

    [00:08:28] Nathan Wrigley: That’s so nice. I want to digress just a little bit because of a couple of things that you said there. Firstly, I want to ask you about your experience at WordCamp Asia. It finished a little while ago. I’m not entirely sure when this podcast episode will go out, so there may be several weeks between it finishing and the podcast airing, but regardless of that. You attended, and by all accounts you enjoyed it.

    I’m just wondering if you could tell us a little bit about your experience there. You can talk about the organizational side, if you like, or just purely what you did, or how you enjoyed it. What you thought about it. What were your memories from that event?

    [00:09:06] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Right. WordCamp Asia is the first flagship event within Asia, and the biggest WordPress event in Asia as well. As we all know, it was scheduled to happen in 2020, right before we had lockdown instructions and not have WordCamp Asia three years ago. With the hard work and effort for everyone, WordCamp Asia finally took place in Bangkok, Thailand.

    From an organizational point of view, I went through the application for becoming an organizer, and I was allocated to the contributor day team, which perfectly fit with my interest, passion. And, as part of the contributor day team, I was able to inspire many contributors through 11 live episodes that we did. We did some webinars on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube live, and we were able to engage with contributors across Asia who would eventually, I believe about 50% or more actually showed up for the event.

    Even though we weren’t selling tickets for the WordCamp, we were getting lots of inquiries related to that because people wanted to come, and attend the biggest contributor day event in Asia. And successfully the first day of the WordCamp, which was 17th of February, we had 650 registered participants who were supposed to come up, and ended up having 700 plus.

    People were so keen to contribute. We had snacks and lunch allocated for registered participants. Some folks came to the door and said, hey, I just want to contribute. If you have a seat, let me take part. I don’t mind having snacks or lunch. I’m happy to just be here because it’s first time.

    For my contribution to the WordCamp Asia, I feel like myself, along with our team lead, Lia Kale, who’s from Nepal, and he has been the themes team rep for quite some time. We also had two other members, Yugi and Doji, who’s from Bhutan, and Lax, who’s from Philippines.

    So four of us actually managed the whole contributor day side of things. Outreaching to teams. Making sure we have representation, contributor table leads, and they have a plan. We contributed for about seven to eight hours on 17th of February. We received great feedback, good feedback from the participants, from the table lead, sponsors, anyone who came in said that they had a great time contributing and collaborating together.

    Even folks who were not from Asia gave feedback saying that it’s culturally vibrant, and it’s also fulfilling to collaborate together. So from that point of view, I feel like we had an excellent time.

    Moving forward to the next two days, 18 and 19, which is WordCamp Asia. We kicked off with Matts Asking Me Anything, more like fireside chat with Josepha being there as one of the co-hosts. That pretty much set the tone for the WordCamp, and we had excellent round of speakers, which people can go in and check from WordCamp Asia YouTube channel. All the sessions are still being uploaded, and information is there on the site.

    I feel that it was a much needed event and now that we have WordCamp Asia on the calendar itself, WordCamp Asia 2024, which will take place in Taipai, Taiwan is going to be a much bigger one. And even better one, because from an organizational point of view we will learn more than we actually accomplished in the past 10 months, 12 months, I should say. Started somewhere around this time last month of organizing. It’s been an experience that we want to relive again and again.

    [00:12:58] Nathan Wrigley: Oh, nice. I had quite a few chats with people who were in attendance that I know and the general feeling that I got from them, I didn’t attend, so I should probably throw that in. The general feeling that I got from more or less everybody that I spoke to was that it was quite a special event.

    They weren’t really able to capture why they thought it was special, but there was something going on at that event that they thought was pretty extraordinary. Maybe it was the fact that it was the first time. Maybe it was the fact that they were attending a country that they had perhaps not been to before.

    There was something there. I don’t know. But everybody that I spoke to really had something incredibly positive to say about it. So yeah, big congratulations to the entire team of people who pulled that off. Very much appreciated and looking forward to Taiwan next year.

    I want to just change direction just very quickly again before we get into the main subject, because in your introduction you mentioned that you are in Bangladesh. You mentioned Dhaka, I don’t know if you actually live there not. But I wonder if, for the audience listening, I wonder if you could paint a picture of what the word WordPress community is like in Dhaka or perhaps better yet, in Bangladesh in general.

    Be nice to kind of prize that open so that we can have some feeling for whether the software is being used and developed and talked about, and are there events that are happening over there? Really just a broad question. What’s the WordPress community look like in Bangladesh?

    [00:14:28] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Yeah, it’s an interesting question. I’m going to try to paint my version of the picture about this, because there are three aspects. Aspect one is that WordPress and contributing to WordPress and open source is not fairly new to Bangladesh. It’s been there, but then again, everyone wants to be either recognized or have something as a return because of their recognition.

    I guess it comes from the fact that we are developing, and people want to spend most of their time in getting something back or being productive. So, contributing to open source is something that people does not take that positively because they want to spend that time for work or other purposes.

    Now there are communities and leaders within the community who encourage others, and it’s slowly, gradually building. I feel from 2020 onwards, since the lockdown happened, many people have looked back and utilizing their leisure hours, where they just want to do something more.

    They want to improve their skills. And from the point of learning new things, WordPress comes up simply because we have a growing community of freelancers, and the freelancer community has been there since 2010, 2011. And a major portion of our revenue, foreign currency revenue, comes from freelancers. Which is why software companies in Bangladesh do get many benefits if they’re bringing foreign reserves to Bangladesh, for example, dollars.

    So freelancers numbers growing. So they know WordPress for a profession. They use WordPress for their clients, for their different projects. Marketplaces have 80 to 90% projects related to WordPress. And this number fluctuates from now and then. But when it comes to contributing to WordPress Core, people aren’t aware because of another thing called communication skills.

    Which is something we are lacking for many years now. And I work with a lot of freelancers trying to train them with their level of English. I even work with companies improving their corporate communication business and formal writing, all of those stuff, since I was trainer back in Australia. And that experience came in handy when I started collaborating with the freelancer community in Bangladesh.

    So we have one organization called B D O S N, Bangladesh Open Source Network, and that was the primary driver of open source events and open source platforms. They had lots of events about Mozilla and WordPress. But as we got closer to the pandemic, it slowly decreased and pretty much non-existent this day.

    So the second aspect of your question is that people know about WordPress because we have seven Meetup chapters within the country, and Dhaka being the capital is one of the most active one, and there’s nothing wrong for me to say that it’s pretty much leading the efforts of community engagement for WordPress. Encouraging people to attend Meetup events. Letting people know that they can Host Meetup events, and in general sharing information about that, the knowledge share about that.

    So, Dhaka’s been inspiring Chittagong, then Barisal, Sylhet. These are different Meetup chapters within Bangladesh. And a result of that is actually WordCamp Sylhet scheduled for May 19th this year. So, in 2019, we had our first and only WordCamp in Bangladesh, which was called WordCamp Dhaka 2019. Now we’re going to have WordCamp Sylhet on May 19th.

    So I feel that it’s still a work in progress. So a lot of people still come to Meetups and say that this is their first time joining a Meetup. And we had about 275 people attending WordCamp Asia from Bangladesh only. So that brings in the third aspect of your question that we’re getting regular folks coming to the Meetups.

    I was fortunate to be able to host the first mega Meetup of the country, last year in November. I hosted a meetup with one of my colleagues, named Yasin Raman. I don’t know if he’s listening or will be listening. Shout out to him, because both of us organized an event with 170 people joining. We had five speaker sessions.

    It was around five hour event. We got sponsors luckily, and it was like a mini WordCamp. We got the feedback people coming back to saying, hey, you hosted a mini WordCamp. It was not a WordCamp, it was just a WordPress Meetup, and I was inspired by the South Florida Mega Meetup, posted by David Bisset. I got the idea that you could bundle and merge Meetup chapters and have a bigger event to give more people allocation for the event. Usually in our meetups, we get 50, average 50 participants, so having 170 plus was the next step for us to getting there.

    So to summarise, the answer to your question. The government acknowledges open source and WordPress is there. We have some initiatives, but that’s only for the companies and organizations, software developing companies and whatnot. B D O S N, as I mentioned, is still not that active. I feel there’s not enough contributors there. And when it comes to WordPress, I do see this particular release, 6.2, which is scheduled within a week and a half. So around 30th of March, we will have what per 6.2 release.

    I at least feel or expect and anticipate that we’ll have 50 plus contributors from Bangladesh itself. So that is a big number as well for us, because last time we had about 30 or even less. So, it’s going to a direction when we will have regular contributors contributing to WordPress, attending WordCamps, hosting events, and just carry it forward.

    [00:20:55] Nathan Wrigley: It really does sound like there’s an awful lot going on in your part of the world and a great deal of excitement and change and new people coming in and new events and a whole ground swell of new and interesting challenges arising. That really genuinely was fascinating. I really enjoyed that. Thank you for describing that in such detail.

    [00:21:16] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: My pleasure.

    [00:21:17] Nathan Wrigley: It would be, really interesting if anybody was listening to this who is from your part of the world who hasn’t reached out, maybe this podcast episode will get even more people, you never know, attending. That would be lovely.

    We’ll move on to the main thrust of our conversation today because the topic which we had designed for this podcast episode was all about non code contribution to WordPress. And I know that that’s an area that you are very keen on. You mentioned in your introduction that you don’t really classify yourself as a coder. But clearly from everything that you’ve said, you definitely classify yourself as a WordPresser.

    And so that’s how this conversation’s going to develop. I wonder if you could talk to us about your experience as to whether when you began dipping your feet into the WordPress ecosystem, did you sense that it was okay to be a non coder, or as I’ve heard many stories of people who, when they begin and they attend events, or they just start looking into community online, there’s this feeling that if you’re not into code, it might be more difficult to find your place.

    Now, I think as time has gone on, certainly in the last several years, I feel that’s less true in that we’ve figured out now that there are literally hundreds of different roles for people who don’t code. But I wondered what your experience was when you first encountered WordPress. Did you have that feeling of, if I’m not coding, I’m not sure I belong here?

    [00:22:45] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Yeah, I did. The general consensus is that when you first join the make, making WordPress Slack, you land on the Core channel, and you see 30,000, I think it’s 40,000 now, 40,000 members in the Core channel. And the ones who are active around couple hundred people are talking about different code, sharing tickets of issues. It doesn’t feel like that anyone who doesn’t understand this can be a part of this. It gets intimidating.

    But for myself, when I first started, as I was going through Slack and exploring new channels, I found out there are teams called Marketing, Documentation, and, Polyglots and so on. So I started with marketing and I realized that you did not need to know coding or you did not have to write a developer field guide, or even you need to write a test report.

    And that got me thinking that, hey, that means it’s not always about writing code. It’s not always about customizing the front end of WordPress and so on. So I felt that, which usually we all feel when we first start. But lucky for me, I’m going to take some names because people have been nice to me and I was fortunate to have some guidance.

    There was Yvette Sonneveld, who’s currently working at Yoast, who used to be the then marketing team rep, who helped me a great deal around that time. There was Michelle Frechette, who I’m sure is a good friend of yours, and she’s been kind enough to spend many hours on Zoom. Not for my sake, but you know, different coffee breaks that used to be hosted in during the lockdown, marketing team used to have a monthly coffee break.

    I think they still do it. And I used to join those Zoom calls, which would be very difficult for my time zone, around 2 or 3:00 AM, midnight my time. But I would still stay up because I had literally nothing else to do, and people were in lockdown. So I would just attend there first three, four, or six weeks. I would just listen to what everyone else was saying.

    And as time progressed, and they were kind enough to just let us stay on the call and not speak a single word. So I give my thanks back to people. There are many names, I just cannot think of the names right now. But Milana, from documentation team, there’s John from documentation team. Alva Tucker from the marketing team.

    I feel like these are the folks who primarily set the tone for me and encourage that, yes. I’m not a programmer, and regardless of where I’m from, I can just give my time back in many different ways. And I started writing meeting notes, summary of a Slack meeting. I started posting those summaries.

    I started creating new agenda items, you know, talking to back and forth, different contributors. Even different time zones, some teams have meeting in different time zones. You know, there’s the EMEA, there’s this APAC one. So, going back and forth and trying to make sure the information is sustained across team communication is where I learned the most.

    So as part of the marketing team, I would attend other team meetings just to collect information from there, which we can then repurpose or re-share with other teams. These are ways that I got involved. And then jump to the documentation team. Like I said, Estella Weather. We have many other, I just can’t think of the names and I don’t think I’m being fair to them. These names need to be shouted to.

    Then I saw this opportunity. Well, there was this post before a major release, there’s a call for release squad members. You could just raise your hand and say, hey, I want to be part of this release squad. And after I became a core contributor for the first time for 5.6, I thought, okay, I’ve become a core contributor without writing a code. I can maybe do something even bigger.

    And if I just share this with the audience that what I did was I tested an issue that was reported many years ago. I replicated the issue in different operating systems and then I took some screen recording. I wrote some feedback. That was it. I became a core contributor and that got me thinking that I could do even something bigger. So I raised my hand to become a release squad member. And these are names that I cannot forget. Jeffrey B. Paul, who works for 10up. There’s JB address and there’s Peter Wilson, who’s from Australia.

    These are three folks primarily who inspired me to start working, or even contribute to the trials team for core releases, major releases. And I got mentorship from these three folks who just said that you don’t need to be a programmer. You can listen to the discussion of the programmers on Slack. Summarize it, and the programmers can continue their discussion.

    So what I used to do, I used to sit in front of my computer for one hour on a dedicated time schedule. The developers from different parts of the world would show up, or a ticket would be raised, and everyone would look into the ticket and share their feedback and ideas.

    Sometimes one ticket can spend an hour. Sometimes each ticket can be two minutes, three minutes long discussion. My job, my role was to summarize everything, document it, and making sure it’s passed onto the next meeting. Or, more importantly, update each ticket with what to do next, some recommendation. Sometimes I would do testing as well. And that’s how I found my place.

    I feel like I’m good at doing that. I’m confident at finding years old tickets, making sure we triage them. These are stuff that took me to the next level and I’m ready to give my time back again for WordPress 6.3 release squad.

    [00:28:59] Nathan Wrigley: That’s amazing. Such an interesting story and unlike one I’ve heard before actually. So a core contributor, but no code in sight. But nevertheless a very important set of roles that you were describing there. I wonder, you’ve obviously thrown yourself into this. In other words it does sound like it’s become an incredibly important part of what you do, and I wonder if you have any thoughts for people who really really maybe don’t have the time available that you do? Are not quite sure.

    They don’t see that they’ll probably ever be as keen as you seem to be. Do you think there’s a place for them? Is it more a case that if you are willing to really go the extra mile then these wonderful things can happen? Or is it the case that people who can just contribute perhaps a few minutes a week are still welcome and needed?

    [00:29:50] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: In short both. But for this to be meaningful and for someone to be satisfied about what they do, you need to go the long, longer path. If you are keen to learn something new. If you’re interested in finding out more and tap into the unknown, then WordPress is a beautiful prospect. I feel every team that I tap into, I learn something new.

    Currently, I’m collaborating with the training team and they have this project called Learn WordPress, which is going to be an amazing thing in a couple of years. It’s already there with many different languages of workshops, tutorials, and information about WordPress. Not just WordPress as a platform, but more like different aspects of WordPress.

    And, even as a programmer, there are different sides of programming. I’m not an expert, but I’ve noticed that some people like to do certain things. So there are components within WordPress. So if a programmer is interested about a particular component, they can start working on that.

    And I believe there’s 30 plus component with each of them having one to five, sometimes ten, component maintainers who take care of those components, which make sure that WordPress is equipped with everything new and not falling back.

    [00:31:09] Nathan Wrigley: It is truly remarkable, the depth and breadth of WordPress. So it’s kind of interesting. You’ve talked about the fact that you’ve dipped your toes into all sorts of different channels in WordPress. You’ve talked about marketing. You’ve talked about documentation and so on. I wonder, for people who are listening to this who are new to WordPress, I don’t know if you’ve got a list available or in your head, I wonder if you can summon up the range of different topics or areas within WordPress that people could become involved in?

    [00:31:39] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Sure. so there’s two set of common topics or checklists that I usually share. We had our latest Meetup just couple of days ago, and I was discussing this topic with a few of our new contributors. So one fact is that if someone’s willing to join the local Meetups, they should start there. That should always be the first step. That gives so much motivation and encouragement, and you can engage with a lot of people.

    And for those who are able to attend those Meetups, they can start finding WordCamps nearby. I don’t know if everyone loves travel, but I love travel and it can sometimes do a positive change for you. So traveling blended with WordPress is a beautiful thing. Unless you experience it, you won’t be able to know what I’m talking about.

    And the second thing is for those who does not want to go to the Meetup. For them, they can always go through the make.wordpress.org site. There are different teams. Just skim through and search for the team that feeds them most, or appropriate team. Find it and then go through that team’s handbook. Most of the teams these days have at least a workshop or tutorial within Learn WordPress. So if you want to contribute to WordPress org, you can check Learn WordPress first.

    Slowly create a WordPress profile and then join the WordPress Slack. As soon as you are able to join a channel, start finding if there is a time which is convenient for you in terms of that team’s meeting. Because team meetings are essential for you to be directly involved with the project. Some teams have weekly meetings, some teams have biweekly, others have monthly meetings. So it’s not that difficult.

    You don’t need to attend the entire meeting. Just stay up to date about your team of interest. About the agenda. What is the focus right now? What kind of work, different work groups are there. Try to tap into a work group. As soon as you are part of a work group, you will know about the details and the current stuff that’s in the pipeline for WordPress. And that can motivate a lot of people.

    And for those who are programmers, they can easily just go to the Core team. And there’s many different sub-channel and sub-teams of Core. There’s Core test. There’s Core performance. There’s WPCLI and many more. I’m just sharing some of the names from the top of my head, because that’s not my strong suit, but there are about six or seven different key teams or sub-teams within the Core team where you can get involved in.

    And I’ve always noticed among contributors, if there’s anything that is within the sweet spot of their passion and interest, it gives them a better result. So, finding that is critical for someone, when it comes to going the long run and sustainably contributing for many years.

    [00:34:44] Nathan Wrigley: You mentioned in the show notes that you had some resources to share. Now, it may be that you’ve just done that, and that was the list of things that you wanted to talk about. But I do want to give you an opportunity to share that list if indeed there were other things on it that you hadn’t yet mentioned.

    [00:35:00] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Yep. I just want to add a name, Sam Munos. I think she works for WP Engine, and is the community developer relationship manager. Apologies if I got her designation wrong. But I have seen her in the documentation team and coming in and always contributing. And she’s the one who inspired me to talk about, or dive deep into this topic.

    I read one of her articles in Torque Magazine. It was published in August, 2002. The title of the article said, no code WordPress contributions matter. And since I read that article in 2000, I got to think, hey, my contributions matter too. Because for the better part of 2020 and 2021, I was simply just contributing as a no coder.

    But now I see people talking about it, and I think Torque Magazine wouldn’t cost anything if that wasn’t substantially important. And I think that article, since I read it, I’ve shared it with at least 15 to 20 people. Just so that I could encourage them to come and contribute to WordPress.

    So when it comes to the resources, there is a lot of resources out there aside from Learn WordPress. But I feel like just following a few folks in Twitter can do the trick for now, for anyone starting. Sam Munos is one of them who I believe is going to be a great advocate in the coming years for non code WordPress.

    [00:36:31] Nathan Wrigley: Thank you so much. What I’ll say is that when we finally click the button to stop recording, I’ll allow us the opportunity to collaborate on the show notes that hit the WP Tavern website. And there may well be things that Ahmed would wish to add, names that he wants to mention and so on, that he hasn’t managed to get together for this show. And I’ll put those in the show notes. So if anything does occur to you in the next days or weeks before this episode goes live, hopefully we can add those in as well.

    We’ve talked a little bit about WordPress events. We’ve obviously, the whole going back to doing things in person is probably one of the most interesting things in the WordPress space. You know, it is fabulous to get in the same room as all those people. But the vast majority of what you are describing is taking place online. And I’m just wondering again, the description for those people who’ve never contributed before. What kind of processes are people going through?

    You know, it can be a bit intimidating joining a Slack channel. But is that the kind of place where all of this happens? Do you need to be following track tickets? Where do you find yourself online? Where do you collaborate online to make this happen?

    [00:37:48] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: I think that’s the question that I hear the most. And you are right on the money with that question. For anyone who has heard about my story and coming back to me, hey, what’s the right place? I always refer them to the Core channel for Making WordPress Slack. However, if you are not someone who wants to go through every single message on Slack, you’re not alone.

    You can just go through. Check the weekly article. There is a dev chat, that is being published each week after the meeting that happens on Slack. You can simply check that article. And staying up to date with what’s happening, weekly basis. The Core channel, or the p2 blog for making WordPress is more than enough. Because anything important to the release itself, or any important track ticket is always circulated back to the Core channel blog as well. So I think that’s enough.

    But then again, if you don’t want to do that either, I feel like just attending online events such as online WordCamps. There’s WordFest. Whichever event that you can find. WordPress Accessibility Day. I’m also going to be part of the organizing team for this year as well.

    We’re going to announce the dates very soon. It’s going to be in September. That’s also another event that you should look into. It’s a 24 hour event about WordPress and accessibility. So these are events that are options out there. And you just need to find the option that speak for you, that’s most fulfilling and giving back to you. And also consider yourself important too, when you are giving back.

    [00:39:28] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. It’s interesting you described a period of what you might describe as lurking at the beginning. In other words, you dropped into certain channels and just observed. And I guess that’s probably some good advice. If you’re not sure where to go. Just go there. Hang out. Read the messages. Engage if you wish to. But if you don’t wish to, just watch and see what happens.

    And if a certain channel or aspect of WordPress doesn’t seem to be clicking with you, there’s always the opportunity to go and start that process of lurking again in another channel. And I would imagine that at some point you will stumble across something which is the best fit for you.

    [00:40:09] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Of course, and I keep on repeating these to folks who I collaborate to that, remember your skills, or strength, or things that gives you satisfaction. And just keep your eyes and ears open. If you see something that clicks with you, just raise your hand. I’ve had 10 people coming back to me saying that, hey, don’t worry, we are here. I received private messages. The first step is to raise your hand, and that’s the bravest step you need to take. I did that, and I’m not regretting that.

    [00:40:44] Nathan Wrigley: Nice, that’s great. Ahmed, time is precious, and so we’ll start to wrap it up. But before we do that, I want everybody to be fully aware of where they can find you. If there’s people listening to this who have been inspired and would like to use your expertise, maybe talk to you one-to-one, email you or whatever it may be. I’ve got this feeling that you are going to be able to persuade quite a few people who are erring on the side of caution to dive into WordPress. So with that in mind, I wonder if you wouldn’t mind just sharing some of the places where you hang out online, where you are most likely to be found.

    [00:41:21] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Absolutely. I’ve got my Twitter handle, which is c h a i o n zero seven. My last name. But that’s pretty much the handle you need to remember. LinkedIn, it’s Twitter. Everywhere I’m available using that handle. Also, I attend the Polyglots weekly meeting. So if you are a polyglot, if you want to translate WordPress into your own language, which you can always do, you can come to the Polyglots channel and I’m pretty much active there, since I’m the current team rep, or one of the current team reps.

    [00:41:55] Nathan Wrigley: That’s absolutely fabulous. Hopefully Armed, we’ll get some people coming in your direction. I really appreciate you coming on the podcast today. It’s been a real pleasure talking to you about your experience in your part of the world, and more broadly with WordPress. Thank you so much for joining us today.

    [00:42:12] Ahmed Kabir Chaion: Thank you so much, Nathan, and I think, what you’re doing can inspire hundreds and hundreds of more contributors. I hope to hear from you in the future and hopefully meet you in person in one of the WordCamps.

    [00:42:24] Nathan Wrigley: That would be indeed very lovely. Thank you so much for joining us.

    On the podcast today we have Ahmed Kabir Chaion.

    As you’ll hear in the podcast, Ahmed has a genuine love of the WordPress community. He’s been an organiser at multiple WordPress events, including WordCamp Asia, the WordPress Accessibility Day, WordFest Live, WordCamp Santa Clarita, and the WordPress Translation Day. As if that were not enough, he’s also served as co-organiser of the Dhaka WordPress Meetup Chapter, is a former Design Team Rep and a current Polyglots Team Rep.

    So, Ahmed’s really engaged in the WordPress community, but how did this all happen? The podcast today focuses on Ahmed’s journey into WordPress.

    Given Ahmed’s involvement in the recent WordCamp Asia, we start the discussion there, talking about how the event went and what plans there are for next year.

    We then get into what the WordPress community is like in the city of Dhaka, and Bangladesh as a whole. Technology has become a popular career option, and WordPress is playing a crucial role in that. We talk about how the community is growing, particularly through local meetups.

    The rest of the podcast is all about how you can find a place in the WordPress community no matter what your strengths are. Maybe you’re into writing code, or SEO. Perhaps marketing or translations are more your thing.

    Ahmed lays out the multitude of paths that you can take to engage and give back to the project. You don’t need to feel you’ve got to be an expert. The project needs people working at every level, and maybe there’s work to be done which you did not know about. That’s certainly Ahmed’s experience.

    He tells us how he got started just by showing up repeatedly, slowly working out areas where he thought his contributions would be most valuable.

    We talk about some of the places Ahmed has frequented online, and some people he’s been most influenced by.

    It’s a lovely tale of a community member who is truly inspired to make the project better.

    In places, the quality of Ahmed’s audio is a little poor, but it’s more than listenable, especially given how enthusiastic Ahmed is.

    Useful links.

    weDevs

    Make WordPress

    WordCamp Asia

    WordPress Accessibility Day

    WordFest Live

    BdOSN, Bangladesh Open Source Network

    WordCamp Dhaka

    Learn WordPress

    WordPress Slack

    No-Code WordPress Contributions Matter

    Ahmed’s Twitter

  • First Round of WordCamp US 2023 Tickets Sold Out

    Tickets for WordCamp US 2023 went on sale this morning and quickly sold out within a few hours, leaving many hoping for another opportunity in the next round. WCUS, WordPress’ flagship event in the Western Hemisphere, is happening August 24-26, 2023, at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland.

    Tickets cost $50 and include access to 40 speaker presentations in the main event, workshops, networking meetups, lunch each day, snacks and beverages, the WordFest party, a t-shirt, and a surprise gift. Contributor Day tickets are separate and will be available soon.

    WCUS organizers have confirmed that there will be additional rounds of tickets released in the future. Those who missed this opportunity can follow @WordCampUS on Twitter to be notified of the next ticket release.

    Despite the high demand for tickets, the event’s August dates prevent some from attending, including families sending their kids to school and European community members who may still be on summer holidays.

    WCUS will also be hosting a Community Summit this year. Applications for attendees are still open and contributors are also welcome to submit topics for the event.

    WordCamp US has updated its website with a design inspired by the colors and mood of the local area’s springtime cherry blossom blooms. Organizers are also updating the programming this year with a call for outside voices. The hurdles placed on potential speakers in previous years were not inclusive of those who haven’t been speaking at local WordPress events and this tends to lead to a stale pool of speakers.

    WCUS organizers are trying something new this year in order to enrich the community with more diverse voices:

    We are targeting experienced, seasoned, professional speakers at the top of their industries who are not currently active members of our unique community to speak at this year’s WCUS program. There are WordPress agency owners who have never been to a local meetup; plugin developers who don’t know what a WordCamp is, and there are scholars and academics who have never heard of Matt Mullenweg.

    WCUS organizers may do a bit of recruiting to make this happen. They are collecting suggestions for speakers and programming topics in order to invite industry-leading speakers from outside the WordPress community. This will not replace the traditional call for speakers, which should be forthcoming.

  • New WP Speakers Website Helps Event Organizers Find Speakers

    Michelle Frechette, Director of Community Engagement at StellarWP, has launched a new independent project called WP Speakers that helps event organizers find available speakers for WordPress meetups, WordCamps, podcasts, and other events. The site offers a database of speakers that is free to join and free to search.

    When speakers sign up, they include a bio, headshot, location, languages they speak, topics, expertise, and contact information. They can also specify if they identify being from an underrepresented group. In the short amount of time the site has been live, WP Speakers has added 149 registered speakers who are ready and willing to share their WordPress knowledge at both virtual and in-person events.

    “As a meetup organizer for my local WordPress meetup, I’m constantly searching for speakers to present,” Frechette said. “On one hand the pandemic made it harder to keep coming up with fresh meetup content, but on the other hand, it allowed me to connect to speakers globally as all of our meetings were moved online. But even with all of the speakers in the world now able to present, it was still hard to think of topics and then source speakers. As well-connected as I am in WordPress, I couldn’t even imagine how much more difficult it might be for someone who didn’t know a lot of speakers personally. So WP Speakers was born.”

    Frechette has a knack for bringing people together and helping them find their place in WordPress. In addition to her open source contributions, she maintains WPCareerPages.com, a site that connects job seekers with WordPress companies, and publishes a weekly tweet thread with available positions.

    Frechette is supporting her efforts on the project through sponsorship funds, which allow her to keep the resource free.

    “It’s important to me that the ability to belong on the site as well as be able to search for speakers always remains free,” she said. “That way no one is denied from being able to participate. A resource like this should be available to all.”

    Frechette plans to continue adding to the speaker resource page and an event organizer resource page is next on the roadmap. Anyone who wants to be listed on the site can fill out the “Join As a Speaker” form and new profiles will be approved in 1-3 business days.

  • Priced Out of API Access: Jetpack and WordPress.com Discontinue Support for Twitter Auto-Sharing

    Jetpack and WordPress.com announced they will no longer support the Twitter API in their products. Last month Twitter suspended WordPress.com’s access to its API, which broke Jetpack Social Sharing – the mechanism that auto-tweets published posts.

    Although WordPress.com’s access to the API was reinstated for a few weeks, the company has now been priced out of offering features that rely on Twitter’s API:

    Twitter recently notified Automattic that it was dramatically changing the terms and pricing of the Twitter API. The cost increase is prohibitive for us to absorb without passing a significant price increase along to you, and we don’t see that as an option. We have attempted to negotiate a path forward, but haven’t been able to reach an agreement in time for Twitter’s May 1 cutoff. 

    Given that, we have decided to discontinue using the Twitter API.

    WordPress.com did not detail its estimated API usage, but Enterprise access starts at $42,000/month for 50 million tweets and scales upwards based on usage, with 100 million tweets priced at $125,000/month and 200 million priced at $210,000 per month. This astronomical price increase will swiftly cull many applications, institutions, and large scale publishers that don’t have an extra $500k/year – $2.5M/year in the budget for Twitter API access.

    In October 2022, Jetpack started monetizing this feature with a paid plan that limited the free version to 30 social shares per month (to any social network), a controversial decision that sent many users in search of alternatives. Passing the cost to the customer here was already beyond what most users wanted to pay for these features and is not sustainable.

    WordPress.com will be removing Twitter from Jetpack Social and refocusing its efforts on other social media sharing capabilities. The company is adding Instagram and Mastodon to its auto-sharing lineup soon. Auto-sharing for Tumblr, Facebook, and LinkedIn still works.

    Starting, today, users who want to share their published posts on Twitter will need to share the link manually through the Twitter app. For clarification, sharing posts by clicking the Tweet button will continue working. This change only affects auto-sharing.

    The massive increase in API pricing has competitors fired up to support users migrating away from Twitter. Automattic, which also owns Tumblr, took a stab at Twitter in the conclusion of the announcement: “If your recent experiences with Twitter have left you dissatisfied, go take Tumblr for a spin — we hear it’s quite a party over there.”

    In February, Mastodon promised that the platform would never charge for API access. After Automattic’s announcement today, Mastodon tweeted they are excited to see the company expanding support for the platform in Jetpack.

    Twitter may be shooting itself in the foot by making it more costly, in terms of time and automation, to have incoming content from the open web. It’s becoming more cumbersome for publishers to share their content. This has further aggravated Twitter’s user base who is used to coming to the platform for up-to-the-minute news. Too many smaller apps are now priced out of providing these kinds of updates. Some users have started encouraging their followers to follow them on other networks to be alerted when posts are published.

    “This is an example of the minor annoyances that will ultimately make people look for alternatives to Twitter,” WordPress.com user @MoviesSilently said. “Frictionless sharing isn’t a make or break but it’s nice.”

    Today’s news has added to users’ compounding disappointment with Twitter. Not only has it is become more costly to have an active voice but advertising has a stranglehold on the feed. As major brands have ceased advertising on the platform, the quality of ads has declined to where scrolling the app has become like wading through a flea market. Twitter users may soon be in for more changes to their feeds as any content originating from WordPress.com or Jetpack-powered sites will require a manual share to be found on the platform.