Title: Remove Default Plugins From WordPress Install
Last modified: August 21, 2016

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# Remove Default Plugins From WordPress Install

 *  [rawalex](https://wordpress.org/support/users/rawalex/)
 * (@rawalex)
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/)
 * In order to save time, bandwidth, and to make the playing field level for ALL
   plugins, I suggest that future wordpress releases no longer have:
 * akismet
    hello dolly
 * as default, forced parts of the downloads. A recent check of wordpress installs
   and archives I found over 1000 copies of hello.php – it’s cute, but is it really
   relevant anymore? If I remove it from every installation I have, the next time
   I update, I get it back. That creates more work, and assures that I can never
   use the automated update ssytem.
 * The same applies for Akismet. If I choose not to pay the commercial ransom to
   use it, why should I be obliged to keep downloading it, installing it, and then
   removing it?

Viewing 12 replies - 1 through 12 (of 12 total)

 *  [Hardeep Asrani](https://wordpress.org/support/users/hardeepasrani/)
 * (@hardeepasrani)
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808802)
 * Speaking of Akismet, you can use Akismet for FREE if you use the personal plan.
   It gives you an option to name the price, where you can choose to use the plugin
   for FREE.
 *  Thread Starter [rawalex](https://wordpress.org/support/users/rawalex/)
 * (@rawalex)
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808803)
 * Hardeep, I understand that. But as a commercial user, I am obligated to pay, 
   and the fee is not unsubstantial – $600 a year (62.5 cents per mille – provided
   you max out the 80k a month).
 * My point is more that giving preferential standing to one product over another,
   and continuing to include it in every download seems a bit out of line.
 *  Moderator [Ipstenu (Mika Epstein)](https://wordpress.org/support/users/ipstenu/)
 * (@ipstenu)
 * 🏳️‍🌈 Advisor and Activist
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808807)
 * The majority of WordPress users are not commerical, so having a plugin that is
   free for them and helps them fight spam is a great tool.
 * As for Dolly, she’s an example of a very simple plugin, meant to inspire people
   to develop their own 🙂
 *  Thread Starter [rawalex](https://wordpress.org/support/users/rawalex/)
 * (@rawalex)
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808808)
 * More and more wordpress is a tool used by corporate, social groups, politicians,
   and the like. It’s grown into a near full on CMS. The more commercial users you
   have, the more they will question what they are obliged to install or what is
   installed by default.
 * If you want to fight spam, wouldn’t it be better to have a default program like
   a captcha using the Google captcha system? I don’t see Akismet as a huge spam
   fighter (it lets too many bots through), as much as making people think they 
   are protected when they really are nowhere near completely covered.
 * Dolly is nice, whatever… but including it in every update doesn’t really help.
 *  Moderator [Ipstenu (Mika Epstein)](https://wordpress.org/support/users/ipstenu/)
 * (@ipstenu)
 * 🏳️‍🌈 Advisor and Activist
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808810)
 * Captcha’s been broken for years, and its not user friendly. The blind and deaf
   hate it and I can’t blame them :/
 *  [Hardeep Asrani](https://wordpress.org/support/users/hardeepasrani/)
 * (@hardeepasrani)
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808812)
 * Akismet takes 90% spam out of equation for me. Spam is a part of blogger’s life,
   so it makes sense to have Akismet plugin.
 *  Thread Starter [rawalex](https://wordpress.org/support/users/rawalex/)
 * (@rawalex)
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808835)
 * Ipstenu, actually ReCaptcha seems to work very well, adding it onto a blog has
   gotten me only one or two spam comments, both non-bot real person type spams,
   and plenty of positive comments from users. The audio feature seems to work fine
   as well. It’s not perfect, but it’s not less perfect than Akismet seems to be.
 * Hardeep, with respect, I understand that Akismet gets rid of some spam, but really
   not all of it. It’s as good a plug in as some of the other anti-spam options,
   from recaptcha and similar tools to hardening options. My only point is that 
   it seems unfair to give this one tool preferential status over the others, especially
   when it is a freemium product offered as part of a money making business. Why
   not have a few other anti-spam tools in every install as well?
 *  Moderator [Ipstenu (Mika Epstein)](https://wordpress.org/support/users/ipstenu/)
 * (@ipstenu)
 * 🏳️‍🌈 Advisor and Activist
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808837)
 * ReCaptcha doesn’t work for people with limited eyesight and hearing. From that
   angle, and from the one that if you google “captcha hacked” you’ll see how many
   are broken, I personally cannot recommend it ever.
 * Akismet’s left in because it’s maintained and monitored and supported by WordPress
   devs. It’s… yes. It’s preferential because we KNOW it’s not going to mess things
   up, that it won’t slip in back doors, and it has a proven track record AND it
   doesn’t break themes/plugins/access 99.999% of the time.
 * Also Akismet has been here and in WP for … Gosh, I can’t remember when it wasn’t(
   so over 6 years). It’s been there before there were all these companies. It’s
   grandfathered in.
 * You can hate it, but it’s here to stay since it lets people leverage Jetpack 
   and other features from .com as well, which a lot of people want.
 *  Thread Starter [rawalex](https://wordpress.org/support/users/rawalex/)
 * (@rawalex)
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808839)
 * Mika, I think you need to go back and re-look at ReCaptcha. It has an audio option,
   where users can click an audio button and hear the actual code. Generally I am
   seeing spam drop to next to nothing as soon as I install it, with little impact
   on the number or ratio of comments to posts.
 * Most of the rest of your answer is sort of dancing around the fact that it’s 
   an in house project that pays the bills, so it’s left in by default. It’s just
   sort of annoying for more pro users to have this thing show up that you have 
   to pay to use – and the price isn’t all that good either. There are plenty of
   very basic concepts (the old “what is two plus 6?” question box) that would likely
   give very similar results in fighting spam. Why not integrate one or more of 
   them right into the basic product? Is the goal removing spam, or is the goal 
   more… umm, obvious?
 *  Moderator [Ipstenu (Mika Epstein)](https://wordpress.org/support/users/ipstenu/)
 * (@ipstenu)
 * 🏳️‍🌈 Advisor and Activist
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808840)
 * > Mika, I think you need to go back and re-look at ReCaptcha. It has an audio
   > option, where users can click an audio button and hear the actual code.
 * Yeah, I know that. You’ve never met anyone both visually and editorially impaired?
   ReCaptcha sucks for them. Making light of it by saying ‘they have an alternative!’
   doesn’t work, because captcha is not accessibility friendly. Nor is it effective
   if the spammers decide to target you. You can look up the studies if you’re interested,
   just google ‘Captcha broken’
 * I danced around the rest because… well. Yes. It’s special and it’s weird and 
   it’s grandfathered in. And that kind of what it is. You don’t have to use it,
   though, and you can lie and use it for free (though it’s nice that you don’t).
   I don’t have, and thus cannot provide, a definitive answer beyond that, and I
   don’t want to lie 🙂
 *  Thread Starter [rawalex](https://wordpress.org/support/users/rawalex/)
 * (@rawalex)
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808843)
 * Actually, I have a family member who is entirely blind, so I have plenty of experience
   with how they deal with (and don’t deal with) the internet. Recaptcha is not 
   perfect, nobody is claiming it. However, it is functional. Most spammers are 
   not going to spend the time and money to get past captcha, a few will but most
   will not.
 * The point is more this: It isn’t any less effective in dealing with spam as compared
   to Akismet, so it’s disappointing that something is grandfathered in while not
   being the optimum solution.
 * As for using it for free, if you have a popular site (at least popular with the
   spammers) you will blow past the volume levels very quickly that will make it
   say that you need a commercial license. The first level of license is insufficient
   for the most part, meaning that you have to pay on a volume level. This isn’t
   for a service you need, but to protect against a weakness and deficiency of how
   wordpress handles spam.
 * It’s funny. I came to realize a while back that wordpress’s problem of spam is
   exactly the same problem as why spam is such a problem in email: Overly permissive
   and easily manipulated systems, with default settings of wide open which invite,
   permit, and encourage spammers at all levels. The solutions generally put forward
   are like sandbags in a flood, a poor line of last defense for something you can’t
   stop.
 * So the real solution is changing the core function and core functionality to 
   better serve real users and to make it less appealing to spammers. WordPress 
   installs are too easy of a target with default settings that encourage them. 
   As an example, allowing people to post a comment based not on the name of the
   post (or it’s permalink) but rather allowing them to use the postID, even if 
   you are specifically not using postID in your blog. Ever wonder why your spam
   often attacks older posts? it’s because they just aim at a random low post number
   and fire away. Often once they have one comment accepted, they will automatically
   add that post number and domain onto a list and come back to spam it again and
   again. Even if you decline the comment or mark it as spam, as long as it gets
   accepted on submission, they keep coming back. They exploit a weakness in the
   way wordpress approaches spam to make it easy for them to spam.
 *  [davidmcc3](https://wordpress.org/support/users/davidmcc3/)
 * (@davidmcc3)
 * [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808848)
 * Re Dolly: It’s been stated on another thread that the image manipulation features
   were taken out because they were only used by a minority. As (probably) and even
   smaller minority of people build their own plugins, what’s the rationale for 
   keeping Dolly in?
 * Re Askimet: If fighting spam is so important (and I’m not saying it isn’t) and
   it’s something that would benefit ALL users, why isn’t there an anti-spam feature
   in the core?

Viewing 12 replies - 1 through 12 (of 12 total)

The topic ‘Remove Default Plugins From WordPress Install’ is closed to new replies.

 * In: [Requests and Feedback](https://wordpress.org/support/forum/requests-and-feedback/)
 * 12 replies
 * 4 participants
 * Last reply from: [davidmcc3](https://wordpress.org/support/users/davidmcc3/)
 * Last activity: [12 years, 1 month ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/remove-default-plugins-from-wordpress-install/#post-4808848)
 * Status: not resolved

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