[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$ff6-rQsoVGt0tSpz7kf71T0tVGnX7JLvt-urH2NOlkJY":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},"sant0sk1","https:\u002F\u002Fprofiles.wordpress.org\u002Fsant0sk1\u002F",2,240,85,30,84,"2026-04-04T10:37:47.460Z",[13,36],{"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":32,"download_link":33,"security_score":8,"vuln_count":21,"unpatched_count":21,"last_vuln_date":34,"fetched_at":35},"clean-wp-dashboard","Clean WP Dashboard","1.0","\u003Cp>Adds an options page for an Administrator to choose which default WordPress dashboard widgets are available.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","Easily remove any\u002Fall of the default WordPress dashboard widgets",200,9024,0,"2009-04-23T13:50:00.000Z","2.7.1","2.7","",[27,28,29,30,31],"clean","dashboard","default","delete","remove","http:\u002F\u002Fgithub.com\u002Fsant0sk1\u002Fclean-wp-dashboard","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Fclean-wp-dashboard.zip",null,"2026-03-15T15:16:48.613Z",{"slug":37,"name":38,"version":39,"author":4,"author_profile":5,"description":40,"short_description":41,"active_installs":42,"downloaded":43,"rating":21,"num_ratings":21,"last_updated":44,"tested_up_to":45,"requires_at_least":46,"requires_php":25,"tags":47,"homepage":53,"download_link":54,"security_score":8,"vuln_count":21,"unpatched_count":21,"last_vuln_date":34,"fetched_at":35},"skeleton-key","Skeleton Key","1.1.1","\u003Cp>As an administrator of a WordPress site with many users, it is often useful to login to a user’s account to troubleshoot something. Asking for their password is tacky and having to reset it is amateurish. Thankfully, you don’t have to do either when you’re armed with this plugin. You can login to the site with any user’s account by providing admin username followed by a “+” followed by their username and your administrative password. All other user authentication is passed on to WordPress core. Handy, huh?\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>To login as user joeblow you’d provide:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cpre>\u003Ccode>Username = admin+joeblow\nPassword = [the admin's password]\n\u003C\u002Fcode>\u003C\u002Fpre>\n\u003Ch4>New In This Version\u003C\u002Fh4>\n\u003Col>\n\u003Cli>WordPress 2.9 compatibility\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Fol>\n\u003Ch3>Contributors\u003C\u002Fh3>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>\u003Ca href=\"http:\u002F\u002Fpixelgraphics.us\u002F\" rel=\"nofollow ugc\">Doug Neiner\u003C\u002Fa>\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n","Gives administrators a skeleton key (their own password) to login as any user they'd like.",40,3786,"2009-12-20T15:11:00.000Z","2.9.2","2.8",[48,49,50,51,52],"admin","login","password","skeleton","users","http:\u002F\u002Fgithub.com\u002Fsant0sk1\u002Fwp-skeleton-key","https:\u002F\u002Fdownloads.wordpress.org\u002Fplugin\u002Fskeleton-key.zip"]