Tue Mar 24 2020
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FastComments is on WordPress!
Considering switching from another WordPress comment plugin? Try FastComments!
Considering switching from another WordPress comment plugin? Try FastComments!
Today we're introducing two new widget types, bringing the total supported widgets to three: Comment Count, Recent Comments, and Top Pages.
For some, the default word blacklist is too restrictive or too open.
Moderators now have the ability to search a combination of user names and comment text via the moderation page.
Sometimes the difference between marking something as spam and approving it can be the context - so FastComments provides an easy way to go from an individual comment to an exact spot in a thread.
By default no approval process is required with FastComments. Your users comment and their comments immediately are available to the whole internet to see (albeit with the unverified tag if they are not logged in). So what if you want to manually moderate and approve every comment?
Want to show off the number of comments on a page before a user clicks in? No problem with FastComments.
A one-man army only scales so far. What do you do when you're overwhelmed by the number of comments you have to review?
Read this post to see how to invite comment moderators to FastComments.
An avatar is the profile icon associated with every account and shown next to every comment.
Gravatar brands themselves as "A Globally Recognized Avatar". It's a service where you can define an avatar for a given email. Any products you sign-up to using that email can then use that avatar. This removes a step for people signing up to FastComments since their avatar is setup automatically.
FastComments will now pull default avatars from Gravatar. You or or users don't have to do anything to get this feature.
If your existing users have already defined their own avatar - no worries - we aren't going to overwrite their custom avatars. Also, users can still overwrite the Gravatar avatar in FastComments.
FastComments is flexible. It attaches to a regular element on a page so it works with any web framework.
Read this post to see an example of multiple instances of FastComments on the same page.