Sorry, for ignoring this thread. I was a bit upset with WordPress for closing my plugins without giving prior notice or even notifying me afterward.
I just wanted to confirm @gilzow’s version of events.
The plugin was most likely closed because of an email address mix-up. www.remarpro.com had partially updated my account email address, but still sent some emails to the old address. I remember reading something from www.remarpro.com saying that they were going to remove plugins registered to unreachable email addresses this summer. I can’t find where I read this, but I clearly remember reading it somewhere.
I’m willing to help migrate the plugin to a new maintainer. Assuming WordPress’ plugin review team are willing to facilitate it, of course. I’ll also help answer any question the new maintainer may have, and help monitoring WordPress core for changes relevant to the plugin.
I don’t really have a good way to audit a prospecting new maintainer. Here are the best requirements for a new maintainer that I could come up with:
- A link to an actively maintained self-hosted WordPress website with your name somewhere on it. You can include it temporarily in an HTML comment on the front page if there’s nowhere on the site it would normally go. I just want to see your name on something more than a placeholder Lorem ipsum blog.
- Some proof of prior PHP development experience. WordPress plugin development is a bonus but not a requirement. An active OpenHub, GitHub, or similar coding profile with some commits in PHP will suffice. I’ll just check that you can add your semicolons and close your brackets.
- An active Keybase, GitHub, OpenHub, BitBucket, or account with a similar service with your full name and an email address visible to the public (or at least to logged in users).
- Email me a photo of yourself and holding your ID and a note saying “I promise not to develop malware, inject ads, or do anything nasty with $plugin_name.” The name on the ID and sending email address must match that of the above websites. (The sending server must also DKIM-sign the entire message and attachment. All leading email providers do this automatically. It’s the only way for me to verify that the message most probably originated from that email address.)
The last one is just to verify that you’re either the person, or control the email address of the person, from the three other links.
Transferring the plugin to a new maintainer gives them access to auto-update and deploy to thousands of WordPress websites. So I’m trying my best to do this right. The plugin is open-source, so you can of course fork it and start over from scratch without the existing user-base.
-
This reply was modified 5 years, 7 months ago by
Dan. Reason: typos
-
This reply was modified 5 years, 7 months ago by
Dan. Reason: more details