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Viewing 25 results - 6,276 through 6,300 (of 7,641 total)
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  • #77130
    jwordsmith
    Member

    Anyone know how to turn off registrations in Buddypress forums, as recommended here? Can’t find a way…

    Mr. Bigsby
    Participant

    i want to get rid everything EXCEPt the forms to sign up, I dont want it to keep the theme of the page. So I’ll do the opposite of what you said. Thanks.

    r-a-y
    Keymaster

    What do you want to do? Make the registration page entirely blank? If so, just delete everything in “register.php”.

    If you want to keep the header and footer, keep the get_header() and get_footer() lines, and delete everything else.

    Mr. Bigsby
    Participant

    okay, thanks. I wasn’t sure if that’s what i needed to do, because I was reading the override thing and figured it could.

    What would X out the theme in that file?

    r-a-y
    Keymaster

    @holgria – Read my post again. I just edited it.

    Mr. Bigsby
    Participant

    yes, there’s no registration file or folder there.

    r-a-y
    Keymaster

    Copy over /bp-themes/bp-default/registration/register.php to /wp-content/themes/THE_AVENUEK9_THEME_DIR/registration/register.php.

    Then open up register.php and make your changes there.

    Mr. Bigsby
    Participant

    I’m using the avenue k9 theme and there isn’t a register php file in the folder in /wp-content/theme

    or is he speaking of /bp-themes/bp-default/registration

    r-a-y
    Keymaster

    @holgria – Are you using a WordPress theme or a BuddyPress theme?

    If you want to use an existing WordPress theme, use the BuddyPress Template Pack plugin:
    https://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/bp-template-pack/

    Then do what techguy stated – modify “registration/register.php” in your WP theme’s folder.

    Mr. Bigsby
    Participant

    Okay, I’m a little confused. I’m new to all of this, so I hope I don’t sound dumb. I read child theme article and I’m a little confused:

    Is a child theme the same as a theme you can download and install? Or is it something different enitrely? Because I currently have a modded installed theme on the site currently that I’m using and want to use (it’s installed in wp-content/themes like a child theme would be …).

    So is it possible for me to make some sort of override to the registration template? Because I just want the registration page to load without the theme/css/ any part/links of the site being shown — just the form.

    techguy
    Participant

    Just make a child theme: https://codex.buddypress.org/how-to-guides/building-a-buddypress-child-theme/ The file you’ll want to edit in your child theme is in the default theme folder under registration/register.php

    You may also want to look at this thread which will redirect people to the register page if they go to one of your other pages directly: https://buddypress.org/community/groups/miscellaneous/forum/topic/splash-start/

    #77105
    techguy
    Participant

    M,
    Yes, I thought of that. I installed the beta copy of WP 3.0 today and found that the users are still stored in the same places for a WP/BP install or a WPMU/BP install as they are separate. So, unless they’ve changed the core user signup calls, then we should be good, but I’ll be sure to test it.

    It’s just too bad that there’s not some BP functions that I could just call like bp_core_creat_user(some variables) and bp_core_activate_user(some variables) so we didn’t have to dig in to figure out the functions that BP is already calling at registration. Maybe there is and I just don’t know it?

    #77100
    Peter Kirn
    Participant

    Okay, very nearly there. I now have registration working – unless you don’t enter the captcha correctly, in which case I get a page not found (curiously, still for /register) Any sense why this might happen when porting code from WPMU to BP?

    So obviously more work to do. But it’s at least part way there.

    #77080
    rich! @ etiviti
    Participant

    i can’t find the old post on here but you can hack it for now by unseting the activity type from the loop

    something like this
    http://blog.etiviti.com/2010/02/buddypress-hack-remove-new-member-registration-from-activity-stream/

    #76998
    Jeff Sayre
    Participant

    @foxly-

    This is a very nice summary of the problem. Thank you for providing the introduction to the various attack vectors spammers currently use.

    I would argue, as you know, that WP / BP also needs to combat registration spam–even though it is the hardest issue to address. There area a number of BP.org members that are looking for a solution, however imperfect, that will noticeably reduce spam signups. If a person is infected with a small viral load, the resulting illness often will not be as severe as if they had received a large dose of invading organisms. The same can be said with website spam signups. Any reduction is better than none.

    But, as this is your thread and I do not want to take your thread off topic (or have others do what I just did ;) ), I will ask that we table that discussion for another thread at another time and focus in this thread on solutions to combating spam once a spam account has successfully registered.

    Once again, this is a great start to the conversation.

    #76984
    r-a-y
    Keymaster
    #76982
    Justin
    Participant

    Thanks :) But it didn’t work =/

    #76972
    Hugo Ashmore
    Participant

    While you’re preparing part 2 I’ll make the comment (probably unpopular) that too an extent this is an issue that BP, WP, Automatic must accept some responsibility for in that WP has always followed the course of making it as easy as possible for inexperienced people to set up a blog/blogs the principle of ‘Out Of The Box’ and ‘5 Minute Install’ all designed to promote the app/s to those users who otherwise might be put off, it’s a marketing ploy to ensure that the app gains widespread and popular use (that is being deliberately cynical to make a point) It is due to that that I say there is a duty of care that falls on the App not on the user or community. I know how to get down and dirty with htaccess files, to read logs, enable various methods to deal with an issue – as do many others here – but lets not forget most don’t! I would suggest that it’s time to pull together all the various approaches to dealing with spam in one clear stickied post, make the steps as clear as possible but emphasize that these steps are of paramount importance to follow (thinking about it that may already exist?) Until such time as Foxly or the dev team comes up with the core improvements.

    For the record I have enabled most of the steps found in various threads here and elsewhere and also disabled sub blog registration and receive no more than around 6 -8 spam sign ups a day, which we can deal with quite quickly and effectively, I’m still slightly puzzled as to why some appear to have such ongoing issues though, very sympathetic but puzzled nonetheless.

    #76958
    foxly
    Participant

    All About BuddyPress Spam

    From what I’ve seen over the past few days, the range of knowledge about spam in the BP community ranges from zero to PhD research project. So, to get this thread off to a productive start, I’m going to give everyone some background info on why spammers target our installations, how they do it, and what we can do to reduce or eliminate these kinds of attacks.

    1) Why do spammers attack BP communities?

    -> Spam is 100% economically motivated. Spammers do what they do because it’s very profitable. Even if only 1 out of a million messages the spammer sends actually reaches somebody, if it cost $2 to send out those million messages and the spammer makes $50 by tricking one person into giving them a credit card number, the spammer is going to throw every resource they have into sending out more messages …because they’re getting a 2500% return on their investment.

    -> Given the choice between multiple sites, a spammer will pick the one that gives the largest payout.

    Gmail is a “hard” target, with users that are experienced with spam. If a spammer sent a billion spam messages to accounts on Gmail, 99.9% of them would be probably be deleted by automated filters at other ISP’s along the way before even arriving at Gmail. The first thousand messages that arrived at gmail would likely be delivered but would be put in user’s spam folders; and the remaining 999,000 messages would be flat-out refused by Gmail’s servers.

    Because anyone with an email account is familiar with spam, probably 999 of those 1000 users would ignore the spam message and 1 user might act on it. So if it cost $20 to send those billion messages and the spammer made $50 by tricking the one person into giving them a credit card number, they’ve only made $30 for all that work.

    BP communities are usually “soft” targets that are inexperienced with spam.

    Once a spammer gets into a BP community, every single message they send is delivered to a member, and most members are NOT expecting to be attacked by other users on the site.

    If a user called “site_news” sends everyone a message that says: “Our site just got featured on Oprah! check out the video! http://www.youtube.com/watch/dQw4w9WgXcQ.cn” every single member is going to get that message, and probably half of them are going to click on the link. (did anyone notice what’s wrong with that “YouTube video” … ;) )

    Then, assuming there are 50,000 members on the BP site, half of them click on the link, half of those people are using Internet Explorer, and the attack site the link points to installs a backdoor on computers running IE …at $2 / install the spammer has just made $25,000!

    Now, if *you* were a spammer, which site would you attack?

    2) How do spammers find BP communities?

    Using Google.

    Example: http://www.google.ca/search?hl=en&q=%2B”is+proudly+powered+by+WordPress+and+BuddyPress” (front page of every BP site on the net)
    Example: http://www.google.ca/search?hl=en&q=inurl:%22/community/members/%22+%2Bbuddypress (members page of every BP site on the net)

    3) How do spammers attack websites?

    -> Most spam attacks are done using robots, because sheer volume of posts is usually the winning factor. In situations where there is a “captcha wall” or other defense blocking registration to a “high value” site (hint: yours), spammers will use people in low-wage countries to break the captcha and sign up on the site. The going rate is about $2 per 1000 captchas.

    http://www.decaptcher.com/client/

    Once inside the site, they will then use bots to post spam to all the members on the site.

    -> There are literally *thousands* of different programs available that spam websites, and they all have *different* venerabilities.

    For example, this program: http://forums.digitalpoint.com/showthread.php?t=1124949

    a) Will DEFEAT a “hidden fields” challenge,
    b) Will DEFEAT a “javascript proof of work” challenge,
    c) Will FAIL a “captcha” challenge
    d) Will FAIL an “Akismet” challenge
    e) Will FAIL a “Hashed Form Field ID” challenge

    But this program: http://www.botmasternet.com/more1/ , wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XRumer , video of it running: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AL2i4SNPJmg

    a) Will DEFEAT a “hidden fields” challenge,
    b) Will DEFEAT a “javascript proof of work” challenge,
    c) Will DEFEAT a “captcha” challenge
    d) Will DEFEAT an “Akismet” challenge (uses proxy networks, never sends the same message twice)
    e) Will DEFEAT a “Hashed Form Field ID” challenge
    f) Will FAIL a “enter the numbers with a triangle over them” challenge (as used by PlentyOfFish.com)
    g) Will FAIL a “click on the photos of cats but not the photos of dogs” challenge

    4) How do we stop spammers from attacking BP communities?

    -> By making it frustrating and unprofitable (but not necessarily impossible) for spammers to target us; while making these tactics invisible to normal users.

    I will cover how I propose to do this in the next post.

    ^F^

    #76866
    @mercime
    Participant

    In WP 2.9.2 go to http://www.yoursite.com/wp-admin/options.php and go down to users_can_register and add 1 to box
    In WPMU 2.9.2 go to http://yoursite.com/wp-admin/wpmu-options.php and go to Allow New Registrations — Enabled.

    #76819
    Jeff Sayre
    Participant

    Okay, per IRC dev chat, let’s use this thread for discussions on ideas to combat registration spam and other types of spam.

    peterverkooijen
    Participant

    @Scotm (“Give me a P2 groupblog with a cleaned up groups feature and BuddyPress is relevant again…”)

    That’s kinda where I’m trying to get to. Marius Ooms as well. One of my frustrations is that I can’t figure out how to put the ‘group blog home’ on the ‘group home’ page itself without breaking the Ajax. The connection between group and group blog is very unclear. Still need to work on that… Also managing all the different settings is unwieldy. This plugin helps, but it would be nice if it all was part of the core, integrated with better management.

    I use it on Web2NewYork.com. You’d have to register to test it, which you’re welcome to do. The site is mostly for event registration. Members so far ignore the blog/group/posting features…

    #76568

    In reply to: Spam registrations

    stwc
    Participant

    Use the search before posting. There are literally dozens of threads about this common problem.

    #76523
    Vendetta
    Participant

    Ok.

    For anyone else that may suffer this frustration.

    Make sure you include files outside any classes or functions you are calling the wp functions from.

    define(‘WP_USE_THEMES’, false);
    require_once (dirname (dirname (__FILE__)) . “/community/wp-blog-header.php”);
    require_once (dirname (dirname (__FILE__)) . “/community/wp-includes/registration.php”);

    Then inside your class method or function you can call the wp function you need to run ie:

    $userid = wp_create_user ($username, $password, $email);

    echo $userid;

    Thanks for everyone’s help.

    V

    #76472
    Vendetta
    Participant

    Yeah no love on that solution either.

    This is ridiculous.

    Where in the world to the registration form post to in BP?

    V

Viewing 25 results - 6,276 through 6,300 (of 7,641 total)
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