WordPress’ New Approach To Third-Party Plugins and Themes -Important Enough?
Hot off the presses: for the first time in its history, WordPress.com business users can access thirdparty plugins and themes! That’s huge for anyone using the world’s most popular web platform, and we’re about to explain why. WordPress Business encompasses the two paid hosting plans, Premium & Business, provided by WordPress themselves. The Premium plan is aimed more at individuals and garage startups on a budget who want more features than the standard free WordPress sites. The more expensive Business plan comes with a more robust suite of features supporting larger enterprises. Before August 2017, users of these two accounts were limited to only WordPress’s own plugins and themes (run by Automattic, the company behind WordPress). That was a huge drawback; part of the main appeal of WordPress is its vast community and continually updating the library of new add ons. One reason WordPress sites are so customizable is that third-party companies everywhere are pushing the boundaries and creating new features… but sadly, business-tier accounts were restricted from accessing them. From August 7, 2017, Premium and Business account holders could access the ever-expanding library of plugins and themes from third parties, practically doubling or tripling the personalization capabilities. WordPress is even reaching out to these partners and WordPress developers to streamline the new integration. Also Have a Look at :Things to Keep in Mind While Creating a WordPress Plugin From Scratch While WordPress’ initial restriction of third-party software may seem like a cutthroat business tactic to undermine competitors business, there’s an actual more humane reason behind it. Third-party software comes with an inherent risk since virtually anyone, anywhere, can create it. This makes third-party themes and plugins an ideal ingress for hackers, with unwitting victims haplessly