You’re searching the web for information on how to choose the best WordPress web hosting service, right? You’re determined that your website host will help search engines prioritize your website above other slower, less reliable and less secure websites. But, how do you decide? This blog post defines the four main types of WordPress web […]
More info:
https://www.wpwhitesecurity.com/best-wordpress-hosting/
On December 14, 2020, the Wordfence Threat Intelligence team finished researching two Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) vulnerabilities in NextGen Gallery, a WordPress plugin with over 800,000 installations, including a critical severity vulnerability that could lead to Remote Code Execution(RCE) and Stored Cross-Site Scripting(XSS). Exploitation of these vulnerabilities could lead to a site takeover, malicious redirects, […]
More info:
https://www.wordfence.com/blog/2021/02/severe-vulnerabilities-patched-in-nextgen-gallery-affect-over-800000-wordpress-sites/
This article covers our public notifications related to major security issues our clients and the WordPress community should know about. We are always focused on prevention and the mitigation of […]
More info:
https://pagely.com/blog/wordpress-security-updates-january-2021/
Linux kernel CVE-2020-10769 Security Advisory Security Advisory Description A buffer over-read flaw was found in RH kernel versions before 5.0 in crypto_authenc_extractkeys in crypto/authenc.c in ...
More info:
https://support.f5.com/csp/article/K62532228?utm_source=f5support&utm_medium=RSS
Libgcrypt vulnerability CVE-2021-3345 Security Advisory Security Advisory Description _gcry_md_block_write in cipher/hash-common.c in Libgcrypt version 1.9.0 has a heap-based buffer overflow when ...
More info:
https://support.f5.com/csp/article/K00498403?utm_source=f5support&utm_medium=RSS
WordPress 5.6 “Simone,” which was released in December, was the third major WordPress release of 2020, and the features and changes that came with it will carry over well into 2021. 5.6 is also now the current default version of WordPress for all new sites built on WP Engine’s managed WordPress platform. If you’re a… […]
More info:
https://wpengine.com/blog/wordpress-5-6-is-now-the-default-for-new-wp-engine-sites/
Nearly 40% of all websites today are powered by WordPress, representing a massive share of the web that continues to grow as the need for flexible, scalable web solutions permeates businesses of all sizes. In addition to new sites built and launched for the first time on WordPress, a huge portion of WordPress builds include… […]
More info:
https://wpengine.com/blog/master-your-migration-from-a-legacy-cms-to-wordpress/
Nearly 40% of all websites today are powered by WordPress, representing a massive share of the web that continues to grow as the need for flexible, scalable web solutions permeates businesses of all sizes. In addition to new sites built and launched for the first time on WordPress, a huge portion of WordPress builds include… […]
More info:
https://wpengine.com/blog/master-your-migration-from-a-legacy-cms-to-wordpress/
Saving a WordPress backup to Dropbox is a fairly simple process. We don’t recommend using only Dropbox to store your backups, but we’ll get to that later. First, we’ll tell you how you can: Backup WordPress to Dropbox account Automatically backup WordPress to Dropbox if you don’t have the time for manual backups. TL;DR: Use […]
More info:
https://blogvault.net/wordpress-backup-to-dropbox/
Saving a WordPress backup to Dropbox is a fairly simple process. We don’t recommend using only Dropbox to store your backups, but we’ll get to that later. First, we’ll tell you how you can: Backup WordPress to Dropbox account Automatically backup WordPress to Dropbox if you don’t have the time for manual backups. TL;DR: Use […]
More info:
https://blogvault.net/wordpress-backup-to-dropbox/