Avatar Privacy free WordPress plugin
Description
Avatar Privacy free WordPress plugin
Avatars from Gravatar.com are great, but they come with certain privacy implications. You as site admin may already know this, but your visitors and users probably don’t. Avatar Privacy can help to improve the privacy situation by making some subtle changes to the way avatars are displayed on your site.
The plugin works without changing your theme files (for reasonably modern themes), and it does support multisite installations. Please note that the plugin does not provide an options page of its own, it rather adds to the existing discussion settings page.
Features
The plugin’s features summed up:
Self-uploaded avatars for users (and custom default images), hosted on your server.
Users and commenters explicitly opt-in before using gravatars.
Gravatar caching to ensure the privacy of your website visitors.
Don’t publish weakly encrypted e-mail addresses of comment authors.
A more detailed examination of the reasons for using Avatar Privacy can be found on the plugin homepage.
WP-CLI Commands
Avatar Privacy includes the following WP-CLI commands:
wp avatar-privacy db show: Show information about the custom database table(s).
wp avatar-privacy db list: List entries in the custom database table(s).
wp avatar-privacy db create: Create the custom database table.
wp avatar-privacy db upgrade: Upgrade the structure of the custom database table.
wp avatar-privacy uninstall: Remove data added by Avatar Privacy.
wp avatar-privacy cron list: List active cron jobs created by the plugin.
wp avatar-privacy cron delete: Delete cron jobs created by the plugin.
Feedback
Please report any problems with the plugin, I’ll do my best to sort things out. You can use the contact form on my code site or create a topic in the support forum. You can contact me in German or English.
Credits
Avatar Privacy is based on the original plugin by Johannes Freudendahl. The new release also includes work by several other people:
Daniel Mester Pirttijärvi (Jdenticon),
Shamus Young (Wavatars),
Andreas Gohr (the original MonsterID and RingIcon),
Scott Sherrill-Mix & Katherine Garner (the hand-drawn monster update)
Benjamin Laugueux (Identicon),
David Revoy (Bird and Cat Avatars), and
Zikri Kader, Colin Davis & Nimiq (RoboHash).