[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$f6IUeiMwtYgH6PwAYQ6-E7prC9oh3EIvG3aTiRgE1xgk":3},{"slug":4,"display_name":4,"profile_url":5,"plugin_count":6,"total_installs":7,"avg_security_score":8,"avg_patch_time_days":9,"trust_score":10,"computed_at":11,"plugins":12},"oiler","https:\u002F\u002Fprofiles.wordpress.org\u002Foiler\u002F",2,110,85,30,84,"2026-04-04T07:56:11.724Z",[13,34],{"slug":14,"name":15,"version":16,"author":4,"author_profile":5,"description":17,"short_description":18,"active_installs":19,"downloaded":20,"rating":21,"num_ratings":21,"last_updated":22,"tested_up_to":23,"requires_at_least":24,"requires_php":25,"tags":26,"homepage":30,"download_link":31,"security_score":8,"vuln_count":21,"unpatched_count":21,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":33},"no-comment","No Comment","0.1","\u003Cp>If you have a large number of blog administrators – or at least more than one – WordPress doesn’t allow each user to manage whether or not they wish to receive email notification of comments in moderation.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>So all this plugin does is take the function that is written to send out those notifications, and filter out the blog’s main administrator email address before sending.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>If you want to add a different email to the filter, it’s not that hard but it’s not yet written in natively.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Why would you ever use this? I wrote this for the NY Times Regional Media group because we have what seems like thousands of blogs and we’re the admin for each and every one. There are admins at the newspapers that do need the notifications, however, so I wrote this in order to stop the flow of emails (appx 300 per day!) coming to just our admin address.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","No Comment is a simple way to remove email notification for just one person out of your list of blog administrators.",100,7799,0,"2011-08-11T14:24:00.000Z","3.2.1","2.0","",[27,28,29],"comments","email-notification","moderation","http:\u002F\u002Foiler2.wordpress.com\u002F2011\u002F08\u002F10\u002Fwordpress-plugin-end-comment-email-notifications\u002F","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Fno-comment.zip",null,"2026-03-15T15:16:48.613Z",{"slug":35,"name":36,"version":37,"author":4,"author_profile":5,"description":38,"short_description":39,"active_installs":40,"downloaded":41,"rating":19,"num_ratings":42,"last_updated":43,"tested_up_to":23,"requires_at_least":44,"requires_php":25,"tags":45,"homepage":25,"download_link":49,"security_score":8,"vuln_count":21,"unpatched_count":21,"last_vuln_date":32,"fetched_at":33},"update-network-time-zones","Update Time Zones Across Network","1.0","\u003Cp>Update at once all of the Settings -> General -> Time Zone options of your WordPress network.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>This plugin was written specifically for a network that has been around for many years and was set up before WordPress 2.8 fixed the daylight savings time issue. Back then, setting the local time for your blog depended on UTC offsets only, so daylight savings folks were off by an hour for half a year. Then WordPress introduced time zones by city and the problem was solved. But we had all our blogs still with the UTC offset in use. So rather than update them individually, this plugin was written to run once and then move on. Recommended use: upload to your mu-plugins folder, run it once and then delete.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","Automatically change the time zone for all of the blogs on your multisite network. Not for single installations. WPMU \u002F Multisite \u002F Network only.",10,1865,1,"2011-09-27T14:42:00.000Z","2.8",[46,47,48],"multisite","network","wpmu","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Fupdate-network-time-zones.zip"]