[wp-testers] Re: Is this possible....
Gaarai
gaarai at gaarai.com
Sat Dec 6 21:17:48 GMT 2008
Simple, by calling the php files directly and passing data to them.
--
Chris Jean
http://gaarai.com/
http://wp-roadmap.com/
Chris Moody wrote:
> If a plugin is inactive, how can someone exploit it?
>
> Stephen Rider wrote:
>> I don't want to delete the "maybe" plugins because I'll forget them
>> between now and when I think I'll need them. What I do sometimes is
>> go through the deactivated plugins and .zip them up. That way: 1)
>> they can't be exploited, 2) no update notifications, 3) no clutter on
>> the plugins screen, though they are there when I go in via FTP.
>>
>> Stephen
>>
>> On Dec 6, 2008, at 12:06 PM, Kirk M wrote:
>>
>>> Simple rules:
>>>
>>> If you have plugins you leave "Inactive" until you need them then
>>> those plugins need to be updated on a regular basis, just like
>>> active plugins.
>>>
>>> If you have "Inactive" plugins that you simply don't use, get rid of
>>> them.
>>>
>>> If you have "Inactive" plugins that you keep around "just-in-case"
>>> but haven't used for a couple-three months, chances are you won't
>>> use them at all so it's safe to delete them for now. You can always
>>> get them back later.
>>>
>>> The slimmer your install, the better. :D
>>
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