At the end of the day most business owners don't give a flying about what CMS they use. They want their site to be fast, get the point across, and look good.
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At the end of the day most business owners don't give a flying about what CMS they use. They want their site to be fast, get the point across, and look good.
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Elena Brescacinreplied to Elena Brescacin last edited by
But business should worry about all this. (2/2)
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Elena Brescacinreplied to Seth :fediverse: :wp:🖊️ last edited by [email protected]
@seth IMHO even security is important. I have even read many negative data about safety/vulnerabilities in web sites and they report WordPress to be 96 percent of cyber-attacks. That's not my field I have no competences on cybersecurity so I can't talk but WordPress has rapid setup "up and go" so that's its advantage. Final user will benefit of what an e-commerce offers (for me accessibility as well, I run away if it takes more than 5 mins to search-add-checkout). (1/2)
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Jos Klever Web Supportreplied to Elena Brescacin last edited by
@talksina @seth Because of the big market share WordPress is more interesting that other CMSs to search for vulnerabilities on websites, because there's a bigger chance that a website uses WordPress.
That doesn't make WordPress less secure, maybe even more secure, because there's a bigger chance that vulnerabilities will be found and patched. But of course you have to keep up with updates.
It's the same with Windows vs MacOS or Linux.
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Elena Brescacinreplied to Jos Klever Web Support last edited by [email protected]
@JosKleverWebSupport @seth Popular vs safe it's the same I tell those folks who insist saying "but HIV is the virus affecting [rude word for 'homosexual men']". And I always reply "well, they discover it more because they're aware it exists and they get controlled more often, while hetero folks do everything secretly and say "it never happens to me" then you find them running to hospital and found out AIDS late presenters. With platforms it's the same. Most used, most controlled.
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Seth :fediverse: :wp:🖊️replied to Elena Brescacin last edited by
@talksina @JosKleverWebSupport Totally
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Elena Brescacinreplied to Seth :fediverse: :wp:🖊️ last edited by
@seth @JosKleverWebSupport When I decided to build my website I wanted something in need of less sighted help as possible. Drupal had its default theme and I didn't care; them switched to WordPress with GeneratePress and gutenberg-based widgets, now I restyled it with FSE and sighted help was just for styles while the interface is mine. Moving away from WP would force me to give all my independence up again. Same for followers getting notified of new posts: I have no B-plan.
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Seth :fediverse: :wp:🖊️replied to Elena Brescacin last edited by
@talksina @JosKleverWebSupport Ugh that stinks so bad.
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Elena Brescacinreplied to Seth :fediverse: :wp:🖊️ last edited by
@seth @JosKleverWebSupport I don't blame you - you couldn't have an idea of Mailpoet's accessibility present or absent. And yes, I should send feedbacks to any plugin/theme/cms or everything which has no accessibility but you know what it would mean? Spending my whole life in giving feedbacks, following up, pinging them back after 3-4 or more versions they've not fixed... It seems like the crocodile chasing its own tail. 25 years of gap in accessibility are given back to us