WPIntell

Source evidence

Good

WP 404 Auto Redirect to Similar Post · review · 2023-11-22T09:30:00+00:00

praisesentiment
mediumseverity
0.61relevance
2replies
Evidence linked to opportunitycommercial context

Proof Health

Open evidence

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

5 / 34 rows with source links

14.7% of this page's analysis has direct source links.

0 build-decision rows missing links

0 rows here require auditable proof before promotion.

29 rows with no attached evidence

0 rows have source counts but still need direct links.

Conversation

review · 5 stars
motmat unresolved
It does what it promises. I thought it messes up google search console but it are probably due other reasons independent on this plugin. Thank u for the explanation and sorry for the wrong bad rating. This topic was modified 2 years, 6 months ago by motmat . This topic was modified 2 years, 6 months ago by motmat . This topic was modified 2 years, 6 months ago by motmat . This topic was modified 2 years, 6 months ago by motmat . This topic was modified 2 years ago by motmat . Hello, It’s virtually impossible that redirections remains after uninstalling this plugin, because redirections are done on-the-fly, via the code, when a 404 page is about to be displayed. So it means you have another plugin or code that redirect/change your pages canonical (which should be avoided at all cost!), and is probably responsible of the mess you described. Google will never dereference living pages, unless you redirect them. Or change canonical tags, which this plugin does not do. Regards. Hello, Thank you for reconsidering your rating, it wasn’t necessary but still appreciable. I just felt bad for your website. If one day you have to deal with redirections/Google Seach Console again, one advise I can give you is to never, ever, try to change the canonical tags. It’s a trap that will lead to more issues. You should leave WordPress generating the canonical as it does. Instead, setup manual redirections if you make important change to your permalink structure, or change to important pages. Either using Yoast, Simple Redirect, Redirections or RankMath redirections…. For the rest of 404 you’re not aware of, or malformed external links that lead to your website: WP 404 Auto Redirect to Similar Post will cover your back, while still letting other plugins mentioned above do their job without disturbing them. Regards.

Comments

2 shown
Konrad Chmielewski 2024-05-03T05:37:00+00:00

Hello, It’s virtually impossible that redirections remains after uninstalling this plugin, because redirections are done on-the-fly, via the code, when a 404 page is about to be displayed. So it means you have another plugin or code that redirect/change your pages canonical (which should be avoided at all cost!), and is probably responsible of the mess you described. Google will never dereference living pages, unless you redirect them. Or change canonical tags, which this plugin does not do. Regards.

Konrad Chmielewski 2024-05-03T09:52:00+00:00

Hello, Thank you for reconsidering your rating, it wasn’t necessary but still appreciable. I just felt bad for your website. If one day you have to deal with redirections/Google Seach Console again, one advise I can give you is to never, ever, try to change the canonical tags. It’s a trap that will lead to more issues. You should leave WordPress generating the canonical as it does. Instead, setup manual redirections if you make important change to your permalink structure, or change to important pages. Either using Yoast, Simple Redirect, Redirections or RankMath redirections…. For the rest of 404 you’re not aware of, or malformed external links that lead to your website: WP 404 Auto Redirect to Similar Post will cover your back, while still letting other plugins mentioned above do their job without disturbing them. Regards.