WPIntell

Source evidence

I can’t login WP LAYOUTS account after I installed plugin.

WP Layouts · support · 2021-08-10T05:45:00+00:00

complaintsentiment
highseverity
1.0relevance
2replies
Evidence linked to opportunitycommercial context

Proof Health

Open evidence

Commercial opportunities need traceable source links before they are treated as build-worthy.

5 / 25 rows with source links

20.0% of this page's analysis has direct source links.

0 build-decision rows missing links

0 rows here require auditable proof before promotion.

20 rows with no attached evidence

0 rows have source counts but still need direct links.

Conversation

support
jerryliu0810 unresolved
I can’t login WP LAYOUTS account after I installed plugin. Following is the message I recieved. View post on imgur.com “We couldn’t find an active WP Layouts plan in your account. Please ensure you are using the latest version of the WP Layouts plugin, and contact support if you are still seeing this message.” I’ve tried to find solution in https://support.wplayouts.space/ But I have no idea. This topic was modified 4 years, 9 months ago by jerryliu0810 . @aspengrovestudios Do not ask anyone ever to post an email. I have archived your reply. Help your users here if you can. While I know you have the best of intentions, it’s forum policy that you not ask users for admin or server access. Users on the forums aren’t your customers, they’re your open source collaborators, and requesting that kind of access can put you and them at high risk. If they are paying customers (such as people who bought a premium service/product from you) then by all means, direct them to your official customer support system. But in all other cases, you need to help them here on the forums. Thankfully are other ways to get information you need: Ask the user to install the Health Check plugin and get the data that way. Ask for a link to the http://pastebin.com/ or https://gist.github.com log of the user’s web server error log. Ask the user to create and post a link to their phpinfo(); output. Walk the user through enabling WP_DEBUG and how to log that output to a file and how to share that file. Walk the user through basic troubleshooting steps such and disabling all other plugins, clear their cache and cookies and try again (the Health Check plugin can do this without impacting any site vistors). Ask the user for the step-by-step directions on how they can reproduce the problem. You get the idea. We know volunteer support is not easy, and this guideline can feel needlessly restrictive. It’s actually there to protect you as much as end users. Should their site be hacked or have any issues after you accessed it, you could be held legally liable for damages. In addition, it’s difficult for end users to know the difference between helpful developers and people with malicious intentions. Because of that, we rely on plugin developers and long-standing volunteers (like you) to help us and uphold this particular guideline. When you help users here and in public, you also help the next person with the same problem. They’ll be able to read the debugging and solution and educate themselves. That’s how we get the next generation of developers. Hi jerryliu0810, we would like to help you with this issue. Please open support ticket via https://wplayouts.space/contact/ and include in the message email address associated with the WP Layouts account.

Comments

2 shown
Jan Dembowski 2021-08-10T11:47:00+00:00

@aspengrovestudios Do not ask anyone ever to post an email. I have archived your reply. Help your users here if you can. While I know you have the best of intentions, it’s forum policy that you not ask users for admin or server access. Users on the forums aren’t your customers, they’re your open source collaborators, and requesting that kind of access can put you and them at high risk. If they are paying customers (such as people who bought a premium service/product from you) then by all means, direct them to your official customer support system. But in all other cases, you need to help them here on the forums. Thankfully are other ways to get information you need: Ask the user to install the Health Check plugin and get the data that way. Ask for a link to the http://pastebin.com/ or https://gist.github.com log of the user’s web server error log. Ask the user to create and post a link to their phpinfo(); output. Walk the user through enabling WP_DEBUG and how to log that output to a file and how to share that file. Walk the user through basic troubleshooting steps such and disabling all other plugins, clear their cache and cookies and try again (the Health Check plugin can do this without impacting any site vistors). Ask the user for the step-by-step directions on how they can reproduce the problem. You get the idea. We know volunteer support is not easy, and this guideline can feel needlessly restrictive. It’s actually there to protect you as much as end users. Should their site be hacked or have any issues after you accessed it, you could be held legally liable for damages. In addition, it’s difficult for end users to know the difference between helpful developers and people with malicious intentions. Because of that, we rely on plugin developers and long-standing volunteers (like you) to help us and uphold this particular guideline. When you help users here and in public, you also help the next person with the same problem. They’ll be able to read the debugging and solution and educate themselves. That’s how we get the next generation of developers.

WP Zone 2021-08-10T17:28:00+00:00

Hi jerryliu0810, we would like to help you with this issue. Please open support ticket via https://wplayouts.space/contact/ and include in the message email address associated with the WP Layouts account.