The first site was heavily customized by someone else years ago so I thought he had unhooked something. But I have since found it on a couple of other sites. Is there a bug allowing these?
]]>I think this is a TML issue ???
When one of my members wants to change their password on the /your-profile/ page they are shown a password strength indicator, and if their password is weak they can tick a checkbox to “Confirm Use of Weak Password”.
Likewise, an administrator can set a user password at /wp-admin/profile.php and “Confirm Use of Weak Password”.
But if a user forgets their password and gets a link to reset it on page /login/?action=rp, they are shown the password strength indicator but they cannot change their password until the password strength is at level Medium or higher.
Is there a way to allow the users to “Confirm Use of Weak Password” on the reset password page, like the other pages?
And thanks for your consistently prompt replies!
Mike
]]>I posted in the forums, asking for ANY help or ideas from the developers. Not a peep. Not one reply. Nothing.
A few days later, still searching vainly in the 12 or so forums I subscribed to for help getting MP3 or MP2 to work, I stumbled across a short comment my Mailpoet that their sending service, the “free for 2000 subscribers” sending service, was taken down “due to abuse”. Sure, abuse. Not that MP3 is actually functional on my end.
I changed my theme, but it still failed. I disabled every single plugin except MP3, and still broken. It sends test emails, but never sends the post notifications. My cronjobs never send mail, and they are correctly set up. The ‘Send Button” was removed from MP2, and is not present in MP3 (THANKS, MP! You ROCK)
So, from my position as a 20+ year Internet developer/hardware designer/R+D engineer, I give MailPoet ZERO stars and have deleted them from my site forever. There are actual real products available which work flawlessly out-of-the-box, and you can even roll your own with software that will run on your own machine.
Goodbye, Mailpoet. Good riddance, and shame on me for ever tolerating your non-responsive behavior and your “it worked when we published it” attitude.
]]>