- Browse the New Mercantile Swag Store (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/06/open-web-merch/) June 22, 2026 jillq
Mercantile (https://mercantile NULL.wordpress NULL.org/), the official swag store of the WordPress project, has a newly redesigned storefront with a catalog that now sits front and center, and a design tuned to hold up across a wide range of screen sizes. There are also small touches, like automatically selecting a variant when only one is in stock and order emails styled to match the look and feel of the store.

Throughout the design, the storefront leans into the history and culture of WordPress. Visual and copy choices nod to familiar elements of the project, from the metabox and the admin bar to Wapuu making the occasional appearance, with small open source and code references for those who look closely. The aim was a storefront that feels uniquely WordPress.
Under the hood, the storefront shows what a modern WordPress and WooCommerce (https://woocommerce NULL.com/) site can do. It is built almost entirely with blocks, including a block-based cart, checkout, mini-cart, and order confirmation, supported by a set of custom theme blocks created for the store. The Interactivity API (https://developer NULL.wordpress NULL.org/block-editor/reference-guides/interactivity-api/iapi-about/) powers the catalog navigation and modal states, the store runs on WordPress 7.0, and accessibility is built in throughout, honoring reduced-motion preferences across animations and meeting color contrast standards. Product pages surface per-product attributes such as size, material, and care, so shoppers have the details they need before adding an item to the cart.

This latest redesign supported the Mercantile booth at WordCamp Europe (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/). To make in-person sales work smoothly, the team enabled local pickup at checkout and added a set of event-only products refined to match the rest of the catalog. Fifty orders were completed at the event using in-person payments, a strong real-world test of the new checkout flow.
There is more on the way! A playful experiment in progress will let curious shoppers explore a text-based version of the store from the command line, a small tribute to the developers who make up much of the WordPress community. Subtle hints pointing the way will appear once it is ready.

The new Mercantile is the work of many contributors who designed, built, tested, and refined it together. Every purchase supports the WordPress Foundation (https://wordpressfoundation NULL.org/), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, in its mission to democratize publishing and preserve open source software for generations to come. Take a look around and find something you love.
- Kim Parsell Memorial Scholarship Opens for WordCamp US 2026 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/06/kim-parsell-wcus-scholarship/) June 19, 2026 Brett McSherry

Applications are now open for the 2026 Kim Parsell Memorial Scholarship, which supports one active WordPress contributor who identifies as a woman and has not previously attended WordCamp US. The scholarship helps make it possible for a community member with financial need to join WordCamp US 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona, and take part in one of the largest annual gatherings in the WordPress project.
The scholarship honors Kim Parsell, a longtime WordPress contributor whose work and presence left a meaningful mark on the project. Kim was known for her care, generosity, and commitment to helping others feel welcome in open source spaces. For readers who are less familiar with her story, the tributes shared by friends and colleagues (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2019/memories-of-kim-parsell/) offer a deeper look at her role in the WordPress community and the lasting impact she had on those who knew her. Through this scholarship, the WordPress Foundation continues to recognize contributors who reflect that same spirit of participation and community.
WordPress is built by people from many backgrounds, experiences, and areas of expertise. Events like WordCamp US create space for contributors to meet in person, learn from one another, and continue the work that supports the software and the community around it. For some contributors, the cost of travel, lodging, and registration can make attending difficult. The Kim Parsell Memorial Scholarship helps reduce that barrier for one eligible contributor each year.
Scholarship Details
One scholarship will be awarded for WordCamp US 2026. Applicants must:
- Identify as a woman.
- Be actively involved as a contributor to WordPress.
- Have never attended WordCamp US before.
- Demonstrate financial need to attend the event.
The scholarship includes the cost of a WordCamp US 2026 ticket, round-trip flight, and lodging. Applications are open through July 10, 2026, and all applicants will be notified of the decision by July 24, 2026.
WordCamp US 2026 will take place August 16–19, 2026, at the Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix, Arizona. Contributors, attendees, volunteers, organizers, and sponsors will come together to share ideas, learn from each other, and continue building the future of WordPress. For many contributors, attending in person creates new ways to collaborate, find support, and stay connected to the open source work that happens throughout the year.
To learn more about eligibility, visit the Kim Parsell Memorial Scholarship page (https://wordpressfoundation NULL.org/kim-parsell-memorial-scholarship/). Community members are encouraged to share this opportunity with contributors who may qualify. You can also learn more about attending WordCamp US 2026 on the WordCamp US tickets page (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/tickets/), explore volunteer opportunities (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/call-for-volunteers/), or review sponsorship opportunities (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/call-for-sponsors/).

- Global Partners Across the First Half of the 2026 WordPress Event Season (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/06/global-partners-first-half-2026/) June 18, 2026 Harmony Romo

This post recaps how the WordPress project’s five Global Partners — Jetpack, WordPress.com, WooCommerce, Bluehost, and Hostinger — supported community events during the first half of 2026. Across more than a dozen regional the first WordPress Developers Day (https://events NULL.wordpress NULL.org/novisad/2026/developer-day/), and a growing network of WordPress Campus Connect (https://events NULL.wordpress NULL.org/campusconnect/) events, Global Partners staffed booths, sponsored sessions, and connected with developers, freelancers, students, and agency owners around the world.
A global footprint
The year began in January with WordCamp Nepal (https://nepal NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026), where Jetpack joined the community in Kathmandu. The momentum carried into India, where WordCamp Kolhapur (https://kolhapur NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) and, a week later, WordCamp Pune (https://pune NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) brought Global Partners face-to-face with a student-heavy audience of roughly 200-250 attendees. In Pune, a session on connecting WordPress with AI workflows drew a large crowd, and attendees were curious about WordPress.com plans, new AI features, and Automattic for Agencies.

In February, Jetpack traveled to WordCamp Port Harcourt (https://portharcourt NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) in Nigeria, an inclusive and well-organized event with 256 attendees that featured talks on inclusion and accessibility. Locally produced swag was a standout success there, a reminder that the WordPress community’s reach extends well beyond Europe and North America.
Across Europe
Spring brought a wave of European events. At WordCamp Madrid (https://madrid NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026), with 280 attendees, WordPress.com served as a Global Sponsor and ran a Wapuu treasure hunt that drew 97 participants.

Down the coast in France, WordCamp Nice (https://nice NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) gave Jetpack a chance to connect with 247 freelancers and developers, an audience that appreciated concrete, easy-to-explain solutions and asked questions about newsletters, security, and Jetpack’s broader feature set.
WordCamp Vienna (https://vienna NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) stood out for its developer-heavy crowd of 277. From a Jetpack-branded booth staffed on both days, the team engaged with agencies and merchants, fielded numerous questions about WooCommerce and security, and booked 8 agency meetings. Many builders were interested to learn that Automattic stands behind both WordPress.com and WooCommerce. In Italy and Germany, WordCamp Torino (https://torino NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) and WordCamp Leipzig (https://leipzig NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) both reflected growing curiosity about AI, a theme that resurfaced throughout the year. At Leipzig, with 109 agencies, hosting companies, and freelancers in attendance, WordPress.com staffed a booth where tote bags were in high demand, while conversations kept returning to AI and WordPress Studio.
WordCamp Slovenia (https://slovenia NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026)and WordCamp Portugal (https://portugal NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) closed the European stretch. WordPress.com brought a booth to Ljubljana, and in Porto, it appeared with both a booth and logo presence alongside WooCommerce, which suited an event filled with e-commerce builders and Woo payment providers. The first WordPress Developers Day in Novi Sad introduced a new format, with Jetpack as a global sponsor and nearly 30 in-depth conversations on Jetpack, WooCommerce, performance, and the realities of client work.
Community in Uganda
In May, WordCamp Kampala (https://kampala NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) brought four Global Partners onto the sponsor roster: Jetpack, WooCommerce, Bluehost, and WordPress.com. The event, themed “Tech for Social Good,” welcomed more than 200 attendees and reflected the energy of a fast-growing local community.
Support from Global Sponsors
Behind every one of these events is a layer of support that does not always appear at a booth. In 2026, Bluehost and Hostinger both joined the WordPress community sponsorship program (https://events NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sponsor/) as top-tier Global Sponsors, alongside Jetpack and WordPress.com. Their contributions help underwrite the global WordCamp program and the community events that make a year like this possible. That program-level backing is what allows organizers in Kathmandu, Porto, and Kampala to bring their events to life, and the WordPress community is grateful to every partner that invests at that scale.
Campus Connect reaches 6,200 students
One of the most notable stories of 2026 is not a WordCamp at all. It is WordPress Campus Connect (https://events NULL.wordpress NULL.org/campusconnect/). As of early June, the program has passed 6,200 students, with 25 events completed in 2026, 45 events all-time, and 42 more in planning or already scheduled. WordPress.com has played a direct support role throughout, including providing hosting for WordPress Campus Connect events around the world.
The connective tissue between these events and the broader community is real. An organizer first met at WordCamp Mukono went on to help lead WordPress Campus Connect work in Uganda. A student who built her first WordPress site at a WordPress Campus Connect event later attended a WordCamp. These events serve as a pathway for the next generation of WordPress contributors, builders, and professionals.
Looking ahead
If 2026 has shown anything, it is that interest in WordPress, and in the tools and services that Global Partners provide, continues to grow around the world. The questions being asked at booths and in sessions are sharper, the audiences more diverse, and the community’s reach more genuinely global. Thank you to Jetpack, WordPress.com, WooCommerce, Bluehost, and Hostinger for being part of that story this year, and to every organizer, volunteer, speaker, and attendee who made these events possible.
To find an upcoming event near you, visit WordCamp Central (https://central NULL.wordcamp NULL.org). To learn how organizations can support the WordPress project, see the community sponsorship program (https://events NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sponsor/).
- What Happened at WordCamp Europe 2026 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/06/wceu-2026-recap/) June 6, 2026 Nicholas Garofalo


WordCamp Europe, the biggest WordPress conference in Europe (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/), spent the first week of June in Kraków. The 2026 edition of this event filled the ICE Kraków Congress Centre from June 4 to 6, drawing 2,458 ticket holders from 81 countries to the south of Poland. Close to a quarter of them were attending their first WordCamp Europe.
The city made it easy to settle in. Every attendee’s badge carried a transport hologram good for unlimited trams and buses. The Main Market Square, the largest in Europe, sat a short ride away, and the local food ran the gamut from pierogi to żurek soup to obwarzanek pretzels sold off the street.
Kraków is beautiful, with history everywhere.
– Sebastian Miśniakiewicz, local team leadThe program kept pace with the setting. Across multiple tracks, the schedule held 49 talks and eight hands-on workshops, grouped into themes that ran from core development and AI to business and the open web. Around them sat a full Contributor Day, a sponsor area, side events, on-site childcare, and an after-party the local team stretched to eight hours.

Contributor Day Opens the Week
As it does every year, the event began the day before the talks. Contributors filled the venue for Contributor Day, a working session where people work together to improve WordPress itself rather than watch a presentation about it. The morning started with registration and a welcome, the room split into teams, and a group photo broke up the work around midday. The afternoon ran a second working block before each team gathered to share what it had done.









The range of tables is the clearest picture of how wide the project has become. Newcomers could sit down with Polyglots to translate WordPress into their own language, with Documentation to fix the pages people reach when they get stuck, or with Support to answer questions in the forums. More technical tables covered Core, Performance, Testing, Themes, and the Plugins team, whose reviewers screen every plugin submitted to the directory.
First-timers were not left to find their own way. The day was built around onboarding tables, named table leads, and mentors, with an open invitation for experienced contributors to adopt a newcomer and walk them through their first patch, string, or ticket.
People who could not travel to Kraków were welcomed to join remotely through the #contributor-day channel in the Make WordPress Slack (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/), so distance was not a reason to sit the day out.
The Birthplace of the Web
It was fitting that the opening keynote came from CERN. The European Laboratory for Particle Physics, on the French-Swiss border outside Geneva, is where the World Wide Web was invented more than 30 years ago, and Joachim Valdemar Yde (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/joachimv), who has managed CERN’s web team since 2021, came to explain why the laboratory had chosen WordPress to carry its web presence forward.
Yde and Francisco Borges Aurindo Barros (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/franciscobbarros), who leads CERN’s WordPress infrastructure, framed the move as a chance to give a web presence built up over three decades a shared, modern foundation. After evaluating several leading content management systems against CERN’s needs, WordPress came out on top.
Barros walked through what they had built. The guiding idea is that people at CERN focus on their content while the web team looks after the platform underneath. A self-service portal lets anyone request a site in a few clicks. Behind it, a shared distribution supplies a common theme and a set of approved, security-hardened plugins, and an in-house tool provisions each new site on Kubernetes in about a minute. In its first year, the platform has already set up hundreds of sites.
Moving years of existing content onto the new platform is the other half of the work, and the team automated it: a single command lifts each site’s pages, headings, and images and rebuilds them as Gutenberg blocks, with no downtime. They plan to open source the tool.
Then Yde delivered the line that the room had been waiting for.
As of today, our main flagship website, home.cern, is now served on WordPress. It’s been automatically migrated, and it’s live.
– Joachim Valdemar Yde, Web Manager, CERNThe rollout is on track to wrap up over the coming months, and early impressions, Yde said, have been overwhelmingly positive, with easy wins in responsiveness and accessibility. For those at the event, the keynote pointed the room toward a later talk by CERN’s Akanksha Chatterjee (https://youtu NULL.be/f09yvh3mnME) on building and maintaining the laboratory’s engineering websites on the same service.
There is a neat symmetry to it. The institution that published the world’s first website now runs on the software that powers more than 40% of today’s web, licensed under the GPL and maintained by the people in the room.
WordPress 7.0 and AI
WordPress 7.0 was a throughline of the conference. Several sessions placed the release at the center, framing it less as a routine update than as a change in what the software is, and in what it makes possible for the people who build with it.
The anchor for that conversation was a panel called “Inside WordPress 7.0.” It gathered contributors who worked on the release, among them Juan Manuel Garrido (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/juanmaguitar), Adam Silverstein (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adamsilverstein), Benjamin Zekavica (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/benjamin_zekavica), Sarah Norris (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mikachan), and Milana Cap (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/milana_cap). It was framed around more than a feature list, setting out to cover how a release of this size actually comes together: the contribution workflows, the coordination, and the human aspects of shipping software in the open.

What gives this release its weight is the work moving into WordPress’s core: a native AI client, a new Abilities API that lets plugins declare what they can do in a way other tools can discover, and a Connectors screen for wiring up providers such as OpenAI, Anthropic, or Google Gemini. The argument running through the AI sessions was that this belongs to everyone who builds on WordPress, not only to developers shipping their own integrations. Speakers got specific about how to put that to work.
- Anukasha Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/anukasha) focused on how the Abilities API can make plugin permissions cleaner and safer than the capability checks developers have leaned on for years.
- In a workshop, Vito Peleg (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wpfeedback) set out to take builders from one-off prompts toward a tool-using workflow that audits a live site and files structured tickets.
- Alain Schlesser (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/schlessera), a WP-CLI maintainer who has worked on structured data and the AI-native web, turned to a fast-growing opportunity. AI assistants and search now send real traffic to the open web, with more than a billion referral visits logged by the middle of 2025. His session framed WordPress as well-placed to earn that attention, with a practical checklist for getting a site ready to be found, read, and cited.
People stayed at the center of the conversation, too. Tammie Lister (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/karmatosed), in a talk called “Human in the loop means something,” framed the phrase as a real commitment rather than a checkbox. Humans and AI are each good at different things, and the products worth building let each do what it does best.
Development and Craft
The development sessions were where the craft lived. Dennis Snell (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/dmsnell), who co-wrote the HTML API and designed the block parser, devoted a deep-dive workshop to that API. Peter Wilson (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/peterwilsoncc), a long-time Core committer on the Performance team, focused on how the WP_Query class has been made faster through better caching, and how site builders can take advantage of that at scale.
Scaling got a hands-on session of its own. One talk set out to see how far a WordPress site can run on a twelve-dollar virtual server, profiling it under load in Grafana and tuning away the bottlenecks, with a GitHub repository so attendees could follow along at home. Fellyph Cintra (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fellyph) focused on the latest in WordPress Playground (https://playground NULL.wordpress NULL.net/), the browser-based tooling and architectural changes that the project credits with a real speed-up.
Jessica Lyschik (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/luminuu), a Core contributor and former default-theme co-lead, set out to make the case that accessibility-ready requirements are far easier to meet than most theme developers assume, drawing on real reviews of both block and classic themes.
Two members of the Plugins team, David Perez (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/davidperez) and Fran Torres (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/frantorres), framed their session as a practical clinic. Between them, they have reviewed more than 25,000 plugins, and they set out to name the common, avoidable issues that keep good plugins stuck in the review queue. For a first-time author, that is the difference between an afternoon and a month of waiting.
The Business of WordPress and the Open Web
The business and community sessions pulled the lens back to people, with a refreshingly unsentimental view of running a WordPress business. Debbie Levitt (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/deltacx) built her talk around a model for finding product-market fit at three levels at once, on the premise that teams celebrate one good metric and then wonder months later where their users went. Vassilena Valchanova (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vasvalch) took on a quieter problem: being good at the work is not the same as anyone knowing you are.
There was a local thread here as well. Irfani Silviana (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/irsilviana), a full-stack developer at a Kraków-based agency, framed the Business Model Canvas as a translation layer that moves developers from shipping features to engineering business value, a fitting talk to give in her own city.
The web’s standards, the argument goes, remain as open as the day Tim Berners-Lee created them at CERN.
That idea carried through the rest of the community sessions.
- David Snead (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wdavidsnead), an attorney who works with internet infrastructure providers, set out to explain how hosts, registrars, and registries coordinate against abuse through shared, real-time intelligence, on the logic that a threat to one WordPress host is a threat to all of them.
- Marcel Bootsman (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mbootsman) shared a practical playbook for how companies and individuals can support open source sustainably and look after the people who keep it going.
- Karin Christen (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/karinchristen) set out to describe how her Swiss agency turned Five for the Future (https://wordpress NULL.org/five-for-the-future/) from a good intention into a standing team habit through internal contributor days.
Running alongside the talks, the hands-on workshops were a chance to build something on the spot. In one, Ryan Welcher (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/welcher) set out to build a touch-enabled gallery slider with the Interactivity API, while another centered on Full Site Editing, with a working portfolio theme attendees could reuse on their next client project. These were laptop-open, leave-with-working-code sessions.


Closing Fireside Chat
The closing session opened with a warm gesture from Kraków University of Technology. Representatives took the stage to thank the organizers and the community and to present Mary Hubbard (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/4thhubbard), the Executive Director of WordPress, with a gift from their faculty of informatics and mathematics. They described what the university and the WordCamp community share: a love of learning and sharing knowledge, and an openness to new ideas, skills, and connections.
Hubbard used the moment to share some news. Starting in October, the university will open a WordPress-specific course, which she called a trail-blazing event for Poland and for WordPress. Earlier that day, the program’s first cohort, around 20 students, had shown what they built, part of the WordPress Campus Connect (https://wordpress NULL.org/education/campus-connect/) and WordPress Credits (https://wordpress NULL.org/education/credits/) education work.


Hubbard then turned the stage into a conversation, inviting Matías Ventura (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/matveb), the lead of the Gutenberg project, and Rich Tabor (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/richtabor), a WordPress designer and developer, to talk through where WordPress is heading and how AI fits in. WordPress 7.0 had just launched with Ventura as its release lead, and he asked everyone who had contributed to it to stand for a round of applause.
Much of the chat explored the balance between building WordPress with AI, and building with AI on WordPress, without losing the human part. Ventura noted that WordPress’s long investment in its design system is paying off now that you can ask an AI to extend a menu or a control, and it reaches for the right components. He pointed to older primitives gaining new value, like WP-CLI (https://wordpress NULL.org/cli/), which AI models use fluently, and to Studio Code (https://developer NULL.wordpress NULL.com/docs/developer-tools/studio/studio-code/), an open source, agent-based coding tool the team has been building for WordPress. Tabor showed how he now ships many small editor improvements by talking to an agent instead of typing code, and Ventura demoed desktop mode and open-canvas experiments that reimagine the admin.
On open source and AI, Hubbard argued that open source is why WordPress has thrived, that the same values should shape AI, and that the community should be far more vocal about it. As she put it, “We should be talking about it, and we should be much louder about it.”
Audience questions pushed on multilingual support, unsticking long-stalled tickets, and reaching a younger, more diverse community. On that last point, Hubbard came back to education, pointing to a US pilot of an AI literacy micro-credential (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/02/ai-leaders-credential/) that uses WordPress as the playground, and made the case for it:
I think that focusing in on younger generations, and bringing them into the project in a healthy way, with the dynamic of education as well as mentorship, and how we can understand and learn from them, as well as mentor them and adopt them as contributors, is very important.
– Mary Hubbard, WordPress Executive DirectorBeyond the Talks
WordCamp is also about the corridor outside the talks, and Kraków gave people reason to roam. Between sessions, attendees moved through the sponsor area for product demos and conversations that often carried on over lunch.






The after-party was the not-so-subtle flourish of a local team that doubled the usual length to eight hours, with Polish food and dragon-and-floral swag that nodded to the Wawel Dragon of Kraków legend. The nearby artistic Kazimierz district kept the evening going, and the trams, as one organizer had promised, were still running reliably afterward.
What Comes Next
WordCamps run on people, and 2026 was no different. The organizing teams, the speakers, the sponsors who funded the venue and the meals, the local crew who sorted trams and pierogi, and the contributors who arrived a day early to work on the project all built this WCEU together. The people watching the livestream (https://www NULL.youtube NULL.com/playlist?list=PL1pJFUVKQ7ET_os7azDwYFsUDoc0Y9plA) from outside Kraków were part of it as well.
For anyone whose appetite was only sharpened by three days in Poland, the calendar already has the next stop. WordCamp US 2026 (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/) (Phoenix, USA) runs August 16 to 19, with its own Contributor Day opening the week.
(https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/)WordCamp Europe will return next year (May 27-29, 2027) in Málaga, Spain.
Photography by the WCEU 2026 photography team (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/community/organisers/#photography-team). See the full galleries on Flickr (https://www NULL.flickr NULL.com/photos/wceu/albums/).
- Protect The Shire (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/06/pts/) June 5, 2026 Matt Mullenweg
tl;dr: Temporary 24-hour cooldown period for plugin/theme releases before auto-updates. AI can give defenders an edge. We want to secure all 78K plugins and themes on WordPress.org.
One of the things we’ve always striven to do as the developers of WordPress is to work harder so you don’t have to; we take technology that’s complex or inaccessible and make it available to everyone, running in as many environments as possible. It’s the Open Source way.
Just last December there was a step-change in coding ability (https://x NULL.com/karpathy/status/2026731645169185220) that rocked many developers, and since April’s reveal of Mythos (https://red NULL.anthropic NULL.com/2026/mythos-preview/), security activity has kicked into high gear. A few days ago, Chrome shipped a release with 429 security fixes (https://chromereleases NULL.googleblog NULL.com/2026/06/stable-channel-update-for-desktop NULL.html)! The threats and opportunities of these new capabilities inspired us to kick off an initiative we call Protect The Shire (hat tip J. R. R. Tolkien (https://www NULL.tolkiensociety NULL.org/discover/biography/)) with the aim of using our best minds and the infrastructure of WordPress.org to make all code in our directories and repositories as secure as possible.
Much of this work was and will remain behind the scenes, and we hope its success is defined mostly by what doesn’t happen. However, while we reckon with our newfound powers, we need to make space for review.
To Update or Not
WordPress core updates go through multiple people and layers of review before they go out, a process we’ve polished to a high art in the 18 years since we introduced one-click upgrades in 2.7 “Coltrane.” (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2008/12/coltrane/)
Core is solid, and I’m so proud that over 50% of all WordPress sites have upgraded to 7.0 within two weeks (https://wordpress NULL.org/about/stats/)! That’s the result of an unimaginable amount of work across thousands of hosts, developers, and teams across WordPress.org. We’ve pushed hard to make upgrades happen automagically, and as fast as possible.
We’re in a liminal period now, and I believe 2026 will be a year of tension between two approaches: updating as quickly as possible to stay secure, and holding back on updating to stay secure.
We’ve seen clever and dangerous supply chain attacks across the npm, PyPI, GitHub, and RubyGems ecosystems, and we even had our own mini-version with the Essential Plugins debacle (https://anchor NULL.host/someone-bought-30-wordpress-plugins-and-planted-a-backdoor-in-all-of-them/), where good plugins were unknowingly sold to a new author who had malicious intent.
How to balance security updates and securing updates?
Mirkwood or the Wild West?
Everyone knows the fun of WordPress is in its 78k+ plugins and themes. We have a rigorous, human-powered review process for theme (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/themes/handbook/review/) and plugin (https://developer NULL.wordpress NULL.org/plugins/wordpress-org/detailed-plugin-guidelines/) submissions, but once you’re published in the directory, you’re on your own. Our update system currently distributes every plugin and theme release as soon as a developer presses the button. That’s what keeps the directory as robust as WordPress itself. There were over 3,000 commits to the plugin repository yesterday!
For now, each new plugin release will wait up to 24 hours before being distributed through auto-updates. This will give everyone, including a new Wapuu (https://wapuu NULL.studio/wapuu/a-gandalf-wapuu-that-is-a-coding-wizard-302912b8/) we call Gandalf, a chance to review changes.
I expect 24 hours could be reduced to minutes as the process evolves, but we’ll err on the side of caution while AI models are advancing so rapidly.
Our plugin review team (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/plugins/) seems superhuman, but still needs to sleep. But bots don’t, and a depth of review that seemed unimaginable before is now a matter of time and tokens.
The security capabilities of AI are going to make the world weird and take a lot of our focus in the next few months, but there’s a light at the end of the tunnel.
Our Shire Is Special
There’s no shortage of ways to find, install, and update plugins and themes for WordPress. For those who choose WordPress.org, though, we want to make sure that it feels safe and secure. That means staying strict about some things—like guidelines and Open Source licenses—while also remaining flexible enough to allow solo hackers, community projects, and for-profit commercial plugins and themes to thrive in our ecosystem.
GitHub stars may get the hype, but if you add up all the numbers in our plugin directory (https://wordpress NULL.org/plugins/), it’s over 400M installs. There are 78k+ extensions, many from solo devs, installed on over a million sites each! Now we need to learn from the best parts of GitHub and make that available to every developer on WordPress.org.
Just because WordPress plugins have a reputation for vulnerabilities is no reason not to aim for the same security and stability we’ve achieved in core. We’ve done the impossible a few times already in our journey from a b2/cafelog fork (https://wordpress NULL.org/book/table-of-contents/) to where we are today (https://wordpress NULL.org/showcase/).
Freedom and security are not zero-sum. With Open Source, we can show how security comes from transparency, not obscurity. Collaboration over competition. What we accomplish when we come together is nothing short of incredible. Success always attracts bad actors, but we grow stronger through every adversity.
The scale of WordPress can make some challenges seem too big to tackle, but given time, there is no problem that’s insurmountable. I’m reminded of the story behind the title of Anne Lamott’s book Bird by Bird (https://www NULL.amazon NULL.com/Bird-Some-Instructions-Writing-Life/dp/0385480016):
Thirty years ago my older brother, who was ten years old at the time, was trying to get a report written on birds that he’d had three months to write, which was due the next day. We were out at our family cabin in Bolinas, and he was at the kitchen table close to tears, surrounded by binder paper and pencils and unopened books about birds, immobilized by the hugeness of the task ahead. Then my father sat down beside him, put his arm around my brother’s shoulder, and said, “Bird by bird, buddy. Just take it bird by bird.”
More to come, stay tuned. I wish everyone in Kraków at WordCamp Europe (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/) the best and hope to see you soon!
- WP23 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/wp23/) May 27, 2026 Matt Mullenweg
WordPress at 23 is simultaneously both the strongest and most precarious it’s ever been.
Last week, we shipped WordPress 7 to the world (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/armstrong/). In seven days, 46% of all WordPresses (https://wordpress NULL.org/about/stats/), tens of millions across countless different hosting environments, are already on 7.0, auto-updated with no breakage. From a Raspberry Pi (https://projects NULL.raspberrypi NULL.org/en/projects/lamp-web-server-with-wordpress) to the most secure sites in the world, like WhiteHouse.gov (https://www NULL.whitehouse NULL.gov/). Sit with that for a minute when you think of all the resources and all the projects that have had security problems in the past few weeks. No supply chain attacks, no security problems, just a stable, secure infrastructure doing its job invisibly to power a huge portion of the open internet.
I’m really proud of the capability and security of WordPress, and we should celebrate that. That accomplishment represents the work of thousands and thousands of people coming together to make the web a better place. Also, an iceberg of what is going on behind the scenes.
However, the release was not what I hoped it would be because so much time from key people was taken away by WP Engine’s (https://wpengine NULL.com/) attacks.
Silver Lake (https://www NULL.silverlake NULL.com/), in its immense 100B+ power, summoned a shoggoth (https://en NULL.wikipedia NULL.org/wiki/Shoggoth) in Quinn Emanuel (https://www NULL.quinnemanuel NULL.com/) that has been paperclip-maximizing legal torture that is not just going after Automattic (https://automattic NULL.com/) and WordPress.org (https://wordpress NULL.org/) and me personally, but this Golem Jagannath is now trying to dissolve the WordPress Foundation (https://wordpressfoundation NULL.org/) itself, a non-profit with no employees or payroll (https://projects NULL.propublica NULL.org/nonprofits/organizations/205498932) that supports WordCamps (https://central NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/) and Open Source education around the world (https://wordpress NULL.org/education/credits/).
If you know anyone at Silver Lake (https://www NULL.linkedin NULL.com/company/silver-lake/), Quinn Emanuel (https://www NULL.linkedin NULL.com/company/quinn-emanuel/), or WP Engine (https://www NULL.linkedin NULL.com/company/wpengine/) in that order, please beg, plead with them to stop the violence. End this internecine warfare that is threatening to destroy one of the last stalwarts of the Open Web.
It’s not fun and games anymore, not just business. This is having a real impact on people’s lives.
It took every ounce of will in my body, and I am grateful to thousands of hours of meditation, to not explode in rage when asked about pineapple on pizza and debating the meaning of Jean Baudrillard (https://en NULL.wikipedia NULL.org/wiki/Jean_Baudrillard) and “bastardized simalcra (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2024/09/wp-engine-banned/)” when miles away, my closest friend is in a hospital bed waiting for a heart transplant.
I have colleagues LITERALLY DYING (https://eric NULL.blog/2026/05/24/six-months/) I can’t be with because Silver Lake / Quinn Emanuel / WP Engine shoggoth is trying to make it seem like I am hiding or destroying evidence because we rotate logs on wordpress.org or I have disappearing chats on Signal with romantic partners (https://www NULL.therepository NULL.email/wp-engine-and-automattic-trade-accusations-of-withheld-evidence-in-flurry-of-court-filings). I don’t curse, but this is so f-ed up I don’t know what to say.
If you don’t know anyone at these entities, please pray, meditate, and call on whatever forces or divine interventions you can to bring this to an end.
I reached out multiple times to resolve this with open arms; I’ve extended every olive branch; and I’ve even said positive things about Silver Lake and WP Engine in the press, trying to bring this to a close. Heather Brunner would not even come into the same room with me.
All of this from a stupid presentation I gave at WordCamp US 2024 about how private equity can hollow out high-trust-based Open Source communities that in the past 19 months has only gotten 16k views on YouTube (https://www NULL.youtube NULL.com/watch?v=fnI-QcVSwMU).
Silver Lake, you have already extracted all your pounds of flesh. I missed my Mom’s knee surgery. If you wanted me to suffer for my sins, I have, and probably deeper than you will ever know. WordPress and WordPress.org, and yes, even my flawed leadership, are at the heart of what has made WP Engine successful so far. You have so much money and power, you just got TikTok, the Trump administration loves you (https://pe-insights NULL.com/trump-approves-14bn-tiktok-us-spin-off-with-oracle-silver-lake-and-kkr-as-investors/), you don’t need to control and take over WordPress, too. If you win, you destroy it, and then what? Please have mercy and stop trying to ruin people’s lives. Let’s move on.
- Looking Ahead to WordCamp Europe 2026 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/wceu-2026-sessions/) May 26, 2026 Brett McSherry

June 4-6, 2026 | ICE Kraków Congress Centre, Kraków, Poland
WordCamp Europe 2026 will bring the WordPress community together in Kraków, Poland, from June 4–6 for Contributor Day, two conference days, and a program shaped by the ideas, tools, and people moving WordPress forward. This year’s schedule includes two official keynotes, hands-on workshops, panels, and sessions across development, accessibility, artificial intelligence, content, search, business, education, security, and community.
The program offers a broad view of how WordPress is used today: as publishing software, a framework for building at scale, a tool for business growth, and a global open source project shaped by contributors around the world. Whether you build with WordPress, write for the web, support clients, teach new learners, or contribute to the project, WordCamp Europe offers a chance to learn from practical examples and connect them to the platform’s future.

Keynotes at WordCamp Europe 2026
The keynote sessions at WordCamp Europe 2026 will give attendees two ways to look at WordPress today: through a large-scale institutional adoption story and through a broader closing reflection on where the project is headed. These sessions anchor the program while connecting many of the themes that appear throughout the conference, from infrastructure and governance to contribution, innovation, and the future of the web.

Joachim Valdemar Yde and Francisco Borges Aurindo Barros will share how CERN is adopting WordPress as its future content management system (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/two-worlds-collide-wordpress-at-cern/). Their keynote will explore the governance, infrastructure, and migration work behind moving more than 800 websites onto a customized WordPress Service, offering a look at WordPress on an institutional scale.

Ma.tt Mullenweg will close WordCamp Europe 2026 with a broader look at WordPress, the open web, and the ideas shaping what comes next (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/closing-keynote/). As the event’s final keynote, this session will bring together many of the conversations happening across Contributor Day, sessions, workshops, and community gatherings throughout the week.
Program Themes to Watch at WCEU 2026
The rest of the WCEU themes are organized around topics that reflect the breadth of the WordPress ecosystem. These themes give attendees a way to follow the sessions most relevant to their work, from building better sites and improving content discovery to growing sustainable businesses, strengthening security, expanding access, and supporting the people and communities behind the project.
Search, Visibility, and Discovery
Search continues to change, but helping people find the right information remains central to the web. WCEU’s search and SEO sessions look at how AI-generated answers, generative engine optimization, shifting user habits, and new discovery platforms are changing visibility for publishers, businesses, and builders. Sessions include Panel: The Future of SEO (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/panel-the-future-of-seo/), with Kacper Bartoszak, Pam Aungst Cronin, Alex Moss, David Cuesta, and Jovana Smoljanovic Tucakov, as well as Emma Young’s AI Search: Why Your Whole Company Should Care (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/ai-search-why-your-whole-company-should-care/), which looks at why AI-native discovery now affects content, development, partnerships, and business strategy.
AI and the Future of Building
Artificial intelligence has a dedicated presence at WordCamp Europe 2026, with sessions that move beyond general discussion and into practical use cases for marketing, product work, development, and site management. Vito Peleg’s Agentic AI & WordPress: From Prompts to Tools & Systems (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/agentic-ai-wordpress-from-prompts-to-tools-systems/) will explore how teams can move from simple prompts to AI workflows that execute tasks, while Monika Dimitrova’s AI Won’t Save Your Marketing (but it might save your time and money) (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/ai-wont-save-your-marketing-but-it-might-save-your-time-and-money/) focuses on how small businesses can use AI without losing the strategy and identity that make their work effective.
Development and Technical Practice
Development sessions at WCEU will focus on how WordPress sites, tools, and workflows are built for long-term use. The program includes a Panel: Inside WordPress 7.0 (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/panel-inside-wordpress-7-0/), with contributors discussing the release, its features, and the process behind it, along with sessions such as Anukasha Singh’s Smarter Plugin Permissions with the Abilities API (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/smarter-plugin-permissions-with-the-abilities-api/), Ariel Ramos’s Headless WordPress API Security in 10 Minutes (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/headless-wordpress-api-security-in-10-minutes/), and Dejan Rudić Vranić’s hands-on workshop Build Your Developer Portfolio: A Hands-on Guide to FSE (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/build-your-developer-portfolio-a-hands-on-guide-to-fse/).
Accessibility and Inclusive Design
Accessibility is part of building a better web for everyone, and WCEU’s accessibility sessions give attendees practical ways to make digital experiences more usable, inclusive, and sustainable. This theme connects directly to WordPress’s project values, from how content is structured to how themes, plugins, and interfaces are designed. For designers, developers, content creators, and project leads, these sessions offer a chance to make accessibility part of everyday decisions rather than a final step at the end of a project.
Content, Writing, and Communication
Content and writing sessions at WCEU will focus on how clearer communication helps users find what they need, teams share what they know, and communities make information easier to understand. Pooja Sanwal’s Why Writing Still Matters in a Video-First Internet (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/why-writing-still-matters-in-a-video-first-internet/) looks at the role of written content as video continues to dominate online traffic, Fernando Tellado’s Do You Really Need an SEO/GEO Pugin for WordPress (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/do-you-really-need-an-seo-geo-plugin-for-wordpress/)? explores what WordPress can already do for visibility, and Birgit Olzem’s Documentation as a Love Language for the Future You (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/documentation-as-a-love-language-for-the-future-you/) looks at how simple documentation practices can help teams and communities preserve knowledge.
Security and Trust
Security remains central to maintaining websites people can rely on. WCEU’s security-focused sessions look beyond basic reminders and into the risks, systems, and decisions that shape safer WordPress experiences. The broader program includes talks on AI-assisted spam and bot detection (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/fighting-spam-and-bots-on-wordpress-with-ai/), plugin permissions, and secure headless WordPress architectures (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/headless-wordpress-api-security-in-10-minutes/), giving attendees practical ways to think about resilience, trust, and responsible site management.
Business and Sustainable Growth
The business sessions at WCEU will explore how WordPress professionals turn ideas, services, and products into sustainable work. Debbie Levitt’s Three Levels of Atomic Product-Market Fit (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/three-levels-of-atomic-product-market-fit/) looks at how teams can understand product-market fit beyond a single metric, Irfani Silviana’s WordPress ROI Map: Engineering Business Value with BMC (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/wordpress-roi-map-engineering-business-value-with-bmc/) connects technical decisions to business outcomes, and Liza Bogatyrev’s Stop Positioning Into Obscurity to Unlock Growth (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/stop-positioning-into-obscurity-to-unlock-growth/) focuses on how clearer positioning can support revenue and adoption.
Education, Contribution, and Community
WordPress grows when people can learn, participate, and find a place to contribute. WCEU’s education and community sessions include Panel: Rethinking Learning in WordPress (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/panel-rethinking-learning-in-wordpress/), featuring Mary Hubbard, Rade Jekic, Klaus Harris, Natalia Basiura, and Benjamin Zekavica, along with Daniel Grzonka’s The New Engineer: Psychology, Systems, and Open Source (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/the-new-engineer-psychology-systems-and-open-source/), Ivana Ćirković’s What It (Really) Means To Be a Part of the WP Credits Program (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/what-it-really-means-to-be-a-part-of-the-wp-credits-program/)?, and Jörg Pareigis’s Sovereign University AI Tutors Powered by WordPress (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/sovereign-university-ai-tutors-powered-by-wordpress/). Together, these sessions connect contributor onboarding, academic partnerships, open source learning, and the future skills people need to work with WordPress.
Explore the Full Program
WordCamp Europe 2026 will bring together many parts of the WordPress ecosystem in one place: software, publishing, business, design, education, and community. The keynotes and theme-based sessions offer a broad look at how WordPress is being used today and how contributors, builders, and users are preparing for what comes next.
Explore the full WordCamp Europe 2026 schedule (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/schedule/) and choose the sessions that match how you use, build, teach, support, or contribute to WordPress. Tickets are available now (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/tickets/) for attendees joining the community in Kraków. All sessions will be live streamed. Keep checking back for updates.

Kraków is calling. See you at WordCamp Europe 2026!
- WordPress 7.0 “Armstrong” (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/armstrong/) May 20, 2026 Matias Ventura

Every WordPress release celebrates an artist who has made an indelible mark on the world of music. Say Hello to WordPress 7.0 “Armstrong”, named in honor of “Satchmo” himself, jazz musician Louis Armstrong.
Known as the “first great jazz soloist”, Louis Armstrong created ensembles that highlighted his own profound trumpeting skills, and in the process, transformed jazz from an orchestral art form into a solo art form. The master trumpeter also impressed the world with his signature vocals, introducing improvisation into Jazz, influencing every artist he worked with, and permanently changing the landscape of music.
Louis Armstrong wove his personal touch into the world of Jazz. With WordPress 7.0 “Armstrong”, you can build with yours.
Welcome to WordPress 7.0!
WordPress 7.0 marks the start of a new era, laying the foundation for AI across the WordPress experience. Greeting you with a modern, more intuitive dashboard, 7.0 introduces enhanced customization and development tools that inspire creativity and tap into endless potential.
Whether you’re a creator, business owner or developer – WordPress 7.0 let’s you create in a way that is uniquely your own.
What’s inside
Explore AI abilities directly in your website, all managed from a central hub. Slide seamlessly through the sleek, new admin theme implemented across the dashboard. Ignite creative flow with new blocks and design tools, and tap into an expansive developer toolbox that gives you more control than ever, letting you create your way.
AI-Integrated WordPress
Possibilities right in your hands.
With AI integrated throughout WordPress the potential is endless. A new AI Client in Core lets WordPress communicate with generative AI models, while connections are easily managed from a single hub in the dashboard. The AI Client combined with the Abilities API makes a fiery duo that introduces new functionality, workflow automation, and creation tools to your website. Install the new AI plugin to expand your options even more: generate and edit images, create titles or excerpts, or even suggest alt text.
7.0 also includes a new Client-Side Abilities package: a Javascript counterpart to the Abilities API, with a built in UI and command palette that delivers extensive new and hybrid AI abilities.

Manage all your external connections in a central hub on the Connector’s screen. Easily dive in with 3 presets, or add your own connections. Authenticate and get started with AI abilities in just a few clicks.

An AI-integrated WordPress promises infinite potential, ready to be discovered.
Modernized Dashboard
Elevate your admin experience.
7.0 introduces a fully revitalized dashboard with a chic, modern new color scheme, and clean finishes throughout.
Polished with smooth transitions that seamlessly shift as you move between screens, you’ll feel like you’re effortlessly gliding through the dashboard.
Just one click of the new Command Palette shortcut, a
⌘KorCtrl+Kicon in the upper admin bar, lets you access your favorite tools from anywhere in the dashboard.
Explore typography from one place, regardless of theme. Install, upload and manage your font collection from the new dedicated font management page, with support for block, hybrid and classic themes.

Visually scrub through revision versions to see what changed at a glance, with markers that make editorial choices more intuitive. Easily pick the revision you want and restore instantly.

Design, Create, Customize
A simpler way to build.
Let WordPress be your muse with new blocks, block supports, and design tools that add visual agility, granular control, and keep every element of your website on brand, with fresh new touches.
Showcase your ideas in a lightbox slideshow with the new gallery block, and finesse your markup with the new Heading block. Deliver clear site navigation with the new Breadcrumbs block, and add more detail to your designs with the new Icons block.

Enhanced responsiveness controls in 7.0 make your site more user friendly. Hide and reveal blocks based on device, without affecting other viewports.

Design and build your menu overlay with blocks and patterns, fully customizable with the styles you want visitors to see. Add columns, stylize typography, or embed your own close button in the overlay. Start with a template or create your own menu from scratch.

Fine tune page design and layout with Patterns that act as a single unit, detachable for more isolated control. Insert your pattern, swap elements and customize with ease.

Style every detail of content with custom CSS at the block level, right in your post or page.

Developer’s toolbox
Advanced tools for building your way.
WordPress 7.0 lets you build faster, better, stronger, and easier with an extensive set of expanded APIs and enhanced functionality.
Create blocks and patterns on the server level using only PHP, auto-registered with the block API.
Explore a more extensible Site Editor, with routing, route validation, and a new wordpress/boot package that allows plugins to build custom site-editor pages.
And much more
For a comprehensive overview of all the new features and enhancements in WordPress 7.0, please visit the feature-showcase website.
Check out whats new in 7.0 (https://wordpress NULL.org/download/releases/7-0)
Learn more about WordPress 7.0
Learn WordPress (https://learn NULL.wordpress NULL.org/) is a free resource for new and experienced WordPress users. Learn is stocked with how-to videos on using various features in WordPress, interactive workshops (https://learn NULL.wordpress NULL.org/social-learning/) for exploring topics in-depth, and lesson plans for diving deep into specific areas of WordPress.
Read the WordPress 7.0 Release Notes (https://wordpress NULL.org/documentation/wordpress-version/version-7 NULL.0) for information on installation, enhancements, fixed issues, release contributors, learning resources, and the list of file changes.
Explore the WordPress 7.0 Field Guide (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/2026/05/14/wordpress-7-0-field-guide/) and learn about the changes in this release with detailed developer notes to help you build with WordPress.
The 7.0 release squad
Every release comes to you from a dedicated team of enthusiastic contributors who help keep things on track and moving smoothly. The team that has led 7.0 is a global, cross-functional group of contributors who are always ready to champion ideas, remove blockers, and resolve issues.
- Release Lead: Matias Ventura (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/matveb/)
- Release Coordination: Ahmed Kabir Chaion (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chaion07/), Amy Kamala (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amykamala/), Mary Hubbard (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/4thhubbard/)
- Tech Leads: Ella van Durpe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ellatrix/), Mukesh Panchal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mukesh27/), Sergey Biryukov (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sergeybiryukov/)
- Triage Leads: Jb Audras (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/audrasjb/), JuanMa Garrido (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/juanmaguitar/)
- Test Leads: Ankit K Gupta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ankit-k-gupta/), Mary Baum (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/marybaum/)
Thank you, contributors
The mission of WordPress is to democratize publishing (https://wordpress NULL.org/about/) and embody the freedoms that come with open source (https://opensource NULL.org/osd-annotated). A global and diverse community of people collaborating to strengthen the software supports this effort.
WordPress 7.0 reflects the tireless efforts and passion of more than 875+ contributors in countries all over the world. This release also welcomed over 200+ first-time contributors!
Their collaboration delivered more than 420 enhancements and fixes, ensuring a stable release for all – a testament to the power and capability of the WordPress open source community.
1000camels (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/1000camels/) · Aakash Verma (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aakashverma1/) · Aaron Jorbin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/jorbin/) · Aaron Robertshaw (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aaronrobertshaw/) · Abdullah Kaludi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/abdullah17/) · Abdur Rahman Emon (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/abduremon/) · Abhay Kulkarni (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/hiabhaykulkarni/) · Abhishek Deshpande (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fitehal/) · acmoifr (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/acmoifr/) · Adam (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/dannythedog/) · Adam Silverstein (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adamsilverstein/) · Adam Zieliński (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/zieladam/) · Adil Öztaşer (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/oztaser/) · adithyanaik (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adithyanaik/) · Aditya Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/iamadisingh/) · Adnan Hyder Pervez (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adnanhyder/) · adnan.limdi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adnanlimdi/) · adrianpiedra (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adrianpiedra/) · adrmf25 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adrmf25/) · afwebdev (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/afwebdev/) · Agnieszka Szuba (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/agnieszkaszuba/) · Ahmed (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/elazzabi/) · Ahmed Kabir Chaion (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chaion07/) · aileenf (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aileenf/) · Ajit Bohra (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ajitbohra/) · Aki Hamano (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wildworks/) · Akshat Kakkad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/akshat2802/) · Albert Juhé Lluveras (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aljullu/) · Alec Rust (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alecrust/) · alecgeatches (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alecgeatches/) · Alex Concha (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/xknown/) · Alex Kirk (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/akirk/) · Alex Lende (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ajlende/) · Alex Sanford (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alexsanford1/) · Alex Stine (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alexstine/) · Alexander Bigga (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/albigdd/) · Ali Aghdam (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aliaghdam/) · Allan Espinoza (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/allanespinoza/) · Alvaro Gómez (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mrfoxtalbot/) · amanandhishoe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amanandhishoe/) · Amber Hinds (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alh0319/) · Ames Plant (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amesplant/) · Amibe Websites (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amibe/) · Amin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amin7/) · Amit Raj (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amitraj2203/) · Amy Kamala (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amykamala/) · Anand Rajaram (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/altf4falt/) · Anastis Sourgoutsidis (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/anastis/) · Anders Norén (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/anlino/) · Andrea Fercia (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/afercia/) · Andrea Roenning (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/awetz583/) · Andrei Draganescu (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/andraganescu/) · Andrei Lupu (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/euthelup/) · Andrew Duthie (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aduth/) · Andrew Nacin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/nacin/) · Andrew Ozz (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/azaozz/) · Andrew Ryno (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/andrewryno/) · Andrew Serong (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/andrewserong/) · Andrew Wilder (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/eatingrules/) · Andrija Vučinić (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aidvu/) · André Maneiro (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/oandregal/) · Anh Tran (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rilwis/) · Ankit K. Gupta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ankit-k-gupta/) · Ankit Kumar Shah (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ankitkumarshah/) · Ankit Panchal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ankitmaru/) · Anne McCarthy (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/annezazu/) · Anne-Mieke Bovelett (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/annebovelett/) · Anthony Burchell (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/antpb/) · Anthony Hortin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ahortin/) · Antoine (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ant1busted/) · Anton Vlasenko (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/antonvlasenko/) · anton7249 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/slieptsov/) · Antonio Sejas (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/antoniosejas/) · antonrinas (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/antonrinas/) · Anukasha Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/anukasha/) · Anup Kankale (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/anupkankale/) · Anveshika 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(https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/lumiblog/) · patrickwclanden (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/patrickwclanden/) · Paul Bearne (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pbearne/) · Paul Biron (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pbiron/) · Paul English (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/bbpaule/) · Paul Kevan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/paulkevan/) · Pavan Patil (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pavanpatil1/) · Pavel Ciorici (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ciorici/) · Pavel Vybíral (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vybiral/) · pavelevap (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pavelevap/) · penelopeadrian (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/penelopeadrian/) · Per Søderlind (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pers/) · Peter Rubin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/provenself/) · Peter Wilson (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/peterwilsoncc/) · peter8nss (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/peter8nss/) · petitphp (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/petitphp/) · Phil Johnston (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/johnstonphilip/) · philhoyt (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/philhoyt/) · Philip (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vheemstra/) · Philip Jackson (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/philipmjackson/) · Phuc Nguyen (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/manhphucofficial/) · Pierre Lannoy (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pierrelannoy/) · Pieterjan Deneys (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/nekojonez/) · Piyush Patel (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/piyushpatel123/) · pmbs (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pmbs/) · poligilad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/poligilad/) · Pooja Kakkad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pooja-n/) · Pooja Killekar (Muchandikar) (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pooja1210/) · poojapadamad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/poojapadamad/) · porg (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/porg/) · Pradeep Pasam (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/gaisma22/) · prajapatvishnu (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/prajapatvishnu/) · Pranav Yeole (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pranavyeole/) · Pranjal Pratap Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pranjalpratapsingh/) · Prasad Karmalkar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/prasadkarmalkar/) · Prashant Baldha (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pmbaldha/) · Prathamesh Bhagat (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/prathameshbhagat1511/) · Pratik Jain (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pratik-jain/) · Pratik Londhe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pratiklondhe/) · Pratik Nawkar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pratiknawkar94/) · Presskopp (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/presskopp/) · Priyanka Gusani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/priyankagusani/) · psorensen (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/psorensen/) · qhaensler (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/qhaensler/) · Rabbi Islam rony (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ronya4927/) · rachid84 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rachid84/) · Rafael Della (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rafaeldella/) · Rafael Miranda (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rafa8626/) · rafaelkr (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rafaelkr/) · Rahan Al Rashid (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rahan00123/) · Rahul Kumar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ekla/) · Rahul Prajapati (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rahulsprajapati/) · Rahul Tank (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rahultank/) · Raj Chauhan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chauhanraj754/) · Rajan Vijayan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rajanit2000/) · Rajdip Tank (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rajdiptank111/) · ralphonz (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ralphonz/) · Raluca (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ralucastn/) · Ramon Ahnert (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rahmohn/) · Ramon Corrales (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rcorrales/) · Ramon James (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ramonopoly/) · Rashed Hossain (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wprashed/) · Ravi Chudasama (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ravichudasama01/) · Ravi Gadhiya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ravigadhiyawp/) · Ravi Khadka (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ravikhadka/) · rcrdortiz (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rcrdortiz/) · Rebeen Sarbast (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rebeensarbast/) · Rejaul Alom Khan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rejaulalomkhan/) · Renatho (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/renathoc/) · Retno Nindya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/retnonindya/) · retrofox (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/retrofox/) · Riad Benguella (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/youknowriad/) · riadev (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/riadev/) · Rian Rietveld (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rianrietveld/) · Ricardo S. (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ricjcs/) · Rich Tabor (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/richtabor/) · Rinkal Pagdar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rinkalpagdar/) · Rishabh Gupta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rishabhwp/) · Rishav Dutta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rishavdutta/) · Rishi Mehta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rcreators/) · Rishit Gupta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rishit30g/) · RM Shiblee Mehdi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shibleemehdi/) · Robert Anderson (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/noisysocks/) · Robert Chapin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/miqrogroove/) · Robert O’Rourke (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sanchothefat/) · Robin van der Vliet (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/robinvandervliet/) · Rodrigo Primo (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rodrigosprimo/) · Rohan Jha (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/geekofshire/) · Rolly Bueno (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rollybueno/) · Romain Menke (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/romainmrhenry/) · Ronnie Burt (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/burtrw/) · Roy Tanck (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/roytanck/) · Rutuja Paramane (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rutujaparamane2004/) · Rutvik Savsani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rutviksavsani/) · Ruud (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ruba1956/) · Ryan Welcher (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/welcher/) · SACHINRAJ CP (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sachinrajcp123/) · Sagar Deshmukh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sagardeshmukh/) · Sagar Jadhav (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sagarjadhav/) · Sagar Ladani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sagarladani/) · Sageth (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sageth/) · Sainath Poojary (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sainathpoojary/) · Sajjad Hossain Sagor (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sajjad67/) · Sal Ferrarello (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/salcode/) · Sam (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/samueljseay/) · samiamnot (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/samiamnot/) · Sampat Viral (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/viralsampat/) · Sana Yasir (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sanayasir/) · Sandeep Dahiya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sandeepdahiya/) · Sandip Sinh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sandipsinh007/) · sandipmaurya2611 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sandipmaurya2611/) · SAndrew (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/andrewssanya/) · Sanket Parmar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sanketparmar/) · Sara (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sarayourfriend/) · Sarah Norris (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mikachan/) · sarah semark (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tinkerbelly/) · Saransh Sinha (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/saranshsinha/) · Sarath E (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/saratheonline/) · Sarthak Jaiswal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sarthak8858/) · Saul Fougnier (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sfougnier/) · saurabh.dhariwal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/saurabhdhariwal/) · Saxon Fletcher (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/saxonafletcher/) · Scott Kingsley Clark (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sc0ttkclark/) · scribu (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/scribu/) · se02vas (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/se02vas/) · Sean Wei (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/seanwei/) · Sergey Biryukov (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sergeybiryukov/) · Sergey Mochalov (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vyatka/) · Seth Rubenstein (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/smrubenstein/) · Shadi Sharaf (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shadyvb/) · Shahi Ferdous (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ferdoused/) · Shail Mehta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shailu25/) · Shalin Shah (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sh4lin/) · shanemac10 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shanemac10/) · Shashank Shekhar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shekh0109/) · Shatrughan Myatra (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shatrumyatra/) · shaunandrews (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shaunandrews/) · Shazzad Hossain Khan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sajib1223/) · shekharnwagh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shekharnwagh/) · Shivam Jha (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/whiteshadow01/) · Showrav Hasan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/showravhasan/) · Shraboni (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shraboni/) · Shreya Shrivastava (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shreya0shrivastava/) · Shubh Mittal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shubhtoy/) · Shubham Patil (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/iamshubhamsp/) · shuvo586 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shuvo586/) · Sidhant Tomar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sidhanttomar/) · sidharthpandita (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sidharthpandita/) · Silas Köhler (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/silaskoehler/) · siliconforks (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/siliconforks/) · silvanarnet (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/silvanarnet/) · sky_76 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sky_76/) · skylarkcob (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/skylarkcob/) · slrslr (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/slrslr/) · Sonali Prajapati (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sonaliprajapati/) · Sophie Caperaa (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sophiecaperaa/) · Sourabh Jain (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sourabhjain/) · Sourav Pahwa (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sourav08/) · Soyeb Salar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/soyebsalar01/) · Spencer Finnell (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/spencerfinnell/) · Sphere Plugins (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/emptyopssphere/) · staggerlee (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/staggerlee/) · Stanko Metodiev (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/metodiew/) · Stefan Pasch (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/hubersen/) · Stefan Velthuys (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/stefanvelthuys/) · stefanfisk (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/stefanfisk/) · Stefano Minoia (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ryokuhi/) · Stephen Bernhardt (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sabernhardt/) · Stephen Edgar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/netweb/) · Steve Burge (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/stevejburge/) · Steve Dufresne (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/dufresnesteven/) · Steve Mosby (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/malgra/) · Stoyan Georgiev (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/stoyangeorgiev/) · strarsis (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/strarsis/) · Stuart Langridge (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aquarius/) · studio_m (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/studiomondiale/) · styankov (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/styankov/) · Subrata Sarkar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/subrataemfluence/) · Suhel-Shaikh-Mohammad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/suhel5047/) · Sukhendu Sekhar Guria (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sukhendu2002/) · Sumit Bagthariya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sumitbagthariya16/) · Sumit Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sumitsingh/) · Sunil Kumar Sharma (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sunilkumarthz/) · sunyatasattva (a11n) (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sunyatasattva/) · susiyanti (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/susiyanti/) · Swanand M (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/swanandm/) · swoyamjeetcodes (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/swoyamjeetcodes/) · Sybre Waaijer (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/cybr/) · Syed Tarikul Islam (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/riko910/) · Sérgio Gomes (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sergiomdgomes/) · Sören Wünsch (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/soean/) · tainacan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tainacan/) · Takashi Irie (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/iamtakashi/) · Takashi Kitajima (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/inc2734/) · Takshil Kunadia (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/takshil/) · Tammie Lister (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/karmatosed/) · tanbirali (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tanbirali/) · Tanvirul Haque (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tanvirul/) · Tapan Kumer Das (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/voboghure/) · Tejas Gajjar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/suhan2411/) · the.pro (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/azora/) · thejaymo (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/thejaymo/) · thelmachido a11n (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/thelmachido/) · them.es (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/themes-1/) · TheViv (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/octotoot/) · Thomas Kräftner (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/kraftner/) · Thorsten Frommen (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tfrommen/) · threadi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/threadi/) · Tim Wright (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/timwright12/) · Timi Wahalahti (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sippis/) · Timothy Jacobs (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/timothyblynjacobs/) · Tobias Bäthge (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tobiasbg/) · Toby Cryns (@themightymo) (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/themightymo/) · Tom Auger (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tomauger/) · Tomoki Shimomura (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shimotomoki/) · Toni Viemerö (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/skithund/) · Tonya Mork (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/hellofromtonya/) · Torsten Landsiedel (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/zodiac1978/) · Tosin Oguntuyi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/spiraltee/) · Troy Chaplin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/areziaal/) · Trupti Kanzariya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/truptikanzariya/) · Tsvetan Tsvetanov (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alerzhus/) · Tung Du (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/dinhtungdu/) · TuomasL (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tule/) · Tushar Bharti (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tusharbharti/) · Tushar Patel (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tusharaddweb/) · Ugyen Dorji (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ugyensupport/) · Ulrich (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/grapplerulrich/) · Umesh Nevase (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/umeshnevase/) · Umesh Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/umeshsinghin/) · up1512001 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/up1512001/) · Utsav Ladani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/utsavladani/) · Vaibhav Singh Web (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vaibhavsweb/) · Valentin Grenier (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/valentingrenier/) · Valérie Galassi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/valer1e/) · Van Ons Open Source (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vanonsopensource/) · Vania (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/twvania/) · Vasco Daniel Baião (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vascobaiao/) · Velda (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/supernovia/) · vgnavada (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vgnavada/) · vietcgi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vietcgi/) · Viktor Szépe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/szepeviktor/) · Vincent Breton (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vincentbreton/) · Vipul Gupta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vipulgupta003/) · Vishal Kakadiya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vishalkakadiya/) · Vishit Shah (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vishitshah/) · vishnu prajapat (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vishnuprajapat/) · Vrishabh Jasani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vrishabhsk/) · Waqas Safdar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/waqassafdar/) · WebCartisan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wooxperto/) · webtasky (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/george9/) · WebTechee (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/gauri87/) · Weston Ruter (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/westonruter/) · WFMattR (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wfmattr/) · Will Skora (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/skorasaurus/) · WinsleyJ (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/winsleyj/) · wiuempe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wiuempe/) · wolf45 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wolf45/) · wongjn (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wongjn/) · WPExplorer (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wpexplorer/) · wplmillet (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wplmillet/) · wpsoul (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wpsoul/) · WraithKenny (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wraithkenny/) · X-Raym (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/x-raym/) · xate (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/xate/) · xavilc (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/xavilc/) · xwolf (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/xwolf/) · Yagnik Sangani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/yagniksangani/) · Yannis Guyon (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/yguyon/) · Yash B (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/getsyash/) · Yash Jawale (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/yashjawale/) · Yogesh Bhutkar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/yogeshbhutkar/) · Yui (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fierevere/) · Yusuf Mudagal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/yusufmudagal/) · zoe20 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/zoe20/) · Zunaid Amin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/zunaid321/) · zuveria (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/zuveria/) · Łukasz Strączyński (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/lstraczynski/)
More than 70 locales have fully translated (https://translate NULL.wordpress NULL.org/stats/) WordPress 7.0 into their language. Community translators are working hard to ensure more translations are on their way. Thank you to everyone who helps make WordPress available in 200+ languages.
Thank you to the more than 21 web hosts (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/hosting/test-results/) that have tested pre-release versions for WordPress 7.0, helping ensure that WordPress and hosting platforms are fully compatible, free of errors, and optimized for the best possible user experience.
Last but not least, thanks to the volunteers who contribute to the support forums (https://wordpress NULL.org/support/forums/) by answering questions from WordPress users worldwide.
Get involved
Participation in WordPress goes far beyond coding. And learning more and getting involved is easy. Discover the teams that come together to Make WordPress (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/) and use this interactive tool (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/contribute/) to help you decide which is right for you.
- WordPress 7.0 Release Candidate 4 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/wordpress-7-0-release-candidate-4/) May 14, 2026 Amy Kamala
The fourth Release Candidate (“RC4”) for WordPress 7.0 is ready for download and testing!
This version of the WordPress software is under development. Please do not install, run, or test this version of WordPress on production or mission-critical websites. Instead, it’s recommended that you evaluate RC4 on a test server and site.
Reaching this phase of the release cycle is an important milestone. While release candidates are considered ready for release, testing remains crucial to ensure that everything in WordPress 7.0 is the best it can be.
You can test WordPress 7.0 RC4 in four ways:
Plugin Install and activate the WordPress Beta Tester (https://wordpress NULL.org/plugins/wordpress-beta-tester/) plugin on a WordPress install. (Select the “Bleeding edge” channel and “Beta/RC Only” stream.) Direct Download Download the RC4 version (zip) (https://wordpress NULL.org/wordpress-7 NULL.0-RC4 NULL.zip) and install it on a WordPress website. Command Line Use this WP-CLI (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/cli/) command: wp core update --version=7.0-RC4WordPress Playground Use the WordPress Playground instance (https://playground NULL.wordpress NULL.net/?php=8 NULL.0&wp=beta&networking=no&language=&multisite=no&random=y4q1rn88xn) to test the software directly in your browser. No setup required – just click and go! The scheduled final release date for WordPress 7.0 is May 20, 2026. The full release schedule can be found here (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/2026/04/22/wordpress-7-0-release-party-updated-schedule/). Your help testing Beta and RC versions is vital to making this release as stable and powerful as possible. Thank you to everyone who helps with testing!
Please continue checking the Make WordPress Core blog (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/) for 7.0-related posts (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/tag/7-0) in the coming weeks for more information.
What’s in WordPress 7.0 RC4?
Want to look deeper into the details and technical notes for this release? Take a look at the WordPress 7.0 Field Guide (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/2026/05/14/wordpress-7-0-field-guide/). For technical information related to the issues addressed since RC3 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/wordpress-7-0-release-candidate-3/), you can browse the following links:
- Closed 7.0 WordPress Core Trac tickets (https://core NULL.trac NULL.wordpress NULL.org/query?status=closed&changetime=05%2F08%2F2026 NULL. NULL.05%2F14%2F2026&milestone=7 NULL.0&group=component&col=id&col=summary&col=milestone&col=changetime&col=type&order=id) since May 8, 2026
- 7.0 Gutenberg commits (https://github NULL.com/WordPress/gutenberg/commits/wp/7 NULL.0?since=026-05-08&until=2026-05-14) since May 8, 2026
How you can contribute
WordPress is open source software made possible by a passionate community of people collaborating on and contributing to its development. The resources below outline various ways you can get involved with the world’s most popular open source web platform, regardless of your technical expertise.
Get involved in testing
Testing for issues is crucial to the development of any software. It’s also a meaningful way for anyone to contribute. Your help testing the WordPress 7.0 RC4 version is key to ensuring that the final release is the best it can be.
This detailed guide (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/test/2026/02/20/help-test-wordpress-7-0/) will walk you through testing features in WordPress 7.0.
For those new to testing, follow this general testing guide (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/test/handbook/get-setup-for-testing/) for more details on getting set up.
If you encounter a potential bug or issue, please report it to the Alpha/Beta area (https://wordpress NULL.org/support/forum/alphabeta/) of the support forums or directly to WordPress Trac (https://core NULL.trac NULL.wordpress NULL.org/newticket) if you are comfortable writing a reproducible bug report. You can also check your issue against a list of known bugs (https://core NULL.trac NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tickets/major).
Curious about testing releases in general? Follow along with the testing initiatives in Make Core (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/test/) and join the #core-test channel (https://wordpress NULL.slack NULL.com/messages/core-test/) on Making WordPress Slack (https://wordpress NULL.slack NULL.com/).
Help translate WordPress
Do you speak a language other than English? ¿Español? Français? Русский? 日本語? हिन्दी? বাংলা? मराठी? ಕನ್ನಡ? You can help translate WordPress into more than 100 languages (https://translate NULL.wordpress NULL.org/projects/wp/dev/). This release milestone (RC4) marks the hard string freeze (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/polyglots/handbook/glossary/#hard-freeze) point of the 7.0 release cycle (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/2026/03/25/wordpress-7-0-release-candidate-phase/).
An RC4 haiku
Step into the next,
bold, new era of WordPress.
Seven-oh is blessed.
Props to @chaion07 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chaion07/) for proofreading and review.
- Get Your WordCamp US 2026 Tickets (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/wcus-2026-get-tickets/) May 14, 2026 Brett McSherry

August 16–19, 2026, Phoenix Convention Center – Phoenix, Arizona
Tickets are now available for WordCamp US 2026, taking place August 16–19, 2026, at the Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix, Arizona. The flagship event brings together people from across the WordPress community to learn, contribute, share ideas, connect with contributor teams, and help shape the future of an open source project that powers over 40% of the web.
Tickets are limited. Secure yours today!WordCamp US is designed for people at many points in their WordPress journey, including contributors, developers, designers, marketers, publishers, business owners, educators, students, and anyone who wants to learn more about WordPress. This year’s event will include Contributor Day, where attendees can work alongside contributor teams and learn how to take part in the project; Showcase Day, which highlights real-world uses of WordPress; and two full days of sessions and workshops. The programming will also explore how artificial intelligence is changing the way people create, publish, build, and maintain digital experiences, with WordPress as an important part of that broader conversation.
Gather in Phoenix
This year also brings WordCamp US to downtown Phoenix, where the Phoenix Convention Center (https://www NULL.phoenixconventioncenter NULL.com/) is close to restaurants, museums, theaters, galleries, live music, and the Roosevelt Row Arts District (https://www NULL.visitphoenix NULL.com/greater-phoenix/phoenix/downtown-phoenix/roosevelt-row/). Attendees can stay near the venue, meet with other community members between sessions, and explore a downtown area served by Valley Metro Rail (https://www NULL.valleymetro NULL.org/how-to-ride/rail). For those extending their trip, Phoenix also offers access to the wider Sonoran Desert region, including parks, gardens, and outdoor spaces that make the city a distinct setting for this year’s event.










Choose the Ticket That Fits
Several ticket options are available, giving attendees different ways to join or support the event:
- General Admission: A $100 ticket that includes access to all four days of WordCamp US programming, including Contributor Day, Showcase Day, sessions, workshops, lunch and snacks, sponsor booths, and the community social.
- Student: A $25 ticket for students who want to learn more about WordPress, connect with mentors and community members, explore open source contribution, and build practical experience.
- Micro-Sponsor: A $750 ticket that includes the same access and attendee benefits as General Admission while helping support the true cost of the event. Micro-Sponsors will also be listed on the official WordCamp US Sponsors page.
Full ticket details, including refund information, visa support, dietary accommodations, registration requirements, and other attendee information, are available on the ticket page. You can also follow the WordCamp US 2026 website (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/news/) for updates on the schedule, speakers, travel information, and more as the event gets closer.

WordPress News
- Browse the New Mercantile Swag Store (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/06/open-web-merch/) June 22, 2026 jillq
Mercantile (https://mercantile NULL.wordpress NULL.org/), the official swag store of the WordPress project, has a newly redesigned storefront with a catalog that now sits front and center, and a design tuned to hold up across a wide range of screen sizes. There are also small touches, like automatically selecting a variant when only one is in stock and order emails styled to match the look and feel of the store.

Throughout the design, the storefront leans into the history and culture of WordPress. Visual and copy choices nod to familiar elements of the project, from the metabox and the admin bar to Wapuu making the occasional appearance, with small open source and code references for those who look closely. The aim was a storefront that feels uniquely WordPress.
Under the hood, the storefront shows what a modern WordPress and WooCommerce (https://woocommerce NULL.com/) site can do. It is built almost entirely with blocks, including a block-based cart, checkout, mini-cart, and order confirmation, supported by a set of custom theme blocks created for the store. The Interactivity API (https://developer NULL.wordpress NULL.org/block-editor/reference-guides/interactivity-api/iapi-about/) powers the catalog navigation and modal states, the store runs on WordPress 7.0, and accessibility is built in throughout, honoring reduced-motion preferences across animations and meeting color contrast standards. Product pages surface per-product attributes such as size, material, and care, so shoppers have the details they need before adding an item to the cart.

This latest redesign supported the Mercantile booth at WordCamp Europe (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/). To make in-person sales work smoothly, the team enabled local pickup at checkout and added a set of event-only products refined to match the rest of the catalog. Fifty orders were completed at the event using in-person payments, a strong real-world test of the new checkout flow.
There is more on the way! A playful experiment in progress will let curious shoppers explore a text-based version of the store from the command line, a small tribute to the developers who make up much of the WordPress community. Subtle hints pointing the way will appear once it is ready.

The new Mercantile is the work of many contributors who designed, built, tested, and refined it together. Every purchase supports the WordPress Foundation (https://wordpressfoundation NULL.org/), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, in its mission to democratize publishing and preserve open source software for generations to come. Take a look around and find something you love.
- Kim Parsell Memorial Scholarship Opens for WordCamp US 2026 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/06/kim-parsell-wcus-scholarship/) June 19, 2026 Brett McSherry

Applications are now open for the 2026 Kim Parsell Memorial Scholarship, which supports one active WordPress contributor who identifies as a woman and has not previously attended WordCamp US. The scholarship helps make it possible for a community member with financial need to join WordCamp US 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona, and take part in one of the largest annual gatherings in the WordPress project.
The scholarship honors Kim Parsell, a longtime WordPress contributor whose work and presence left a meaningful mark on the project. Kim was known for her care, generosity, and commitment to helping others feel welcome in open source spaces. For readers who are less familiar with her story, the tributes shared by friends and colleagues (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2019/memories-of-kim-parsell/) offer a deeper look at her role in the WordPress community and the lasting impact she had on those who knew her. Through this scholarship, the WordPress Foundation continues to recognize contributors who reflect that same spirit of participation and community.
WordPress is built by people from many backgrounds, experiences, and areas of expertise. Events like WordCamp US create space for contributors to meet in person, learn from one another, and continue the work that supports the software and the community around it. For some contributors, the cost of travel, lodging, and registration can make attending difficult. The Kim Parsell Memorial Scholarship helps reduce that barrier for one eligible contributor each year.
Scholarship Details
One scholarship will be awarded for WordCamp US 2026. Applicants must:
- Identify as a woman.
- Be actively involved as a contributor to WordPress.
- Have never attended WordCamp US before.
- Demonstrate financial need to attend the event.
The scholarship includes the cost of a WordCamp US 2026 ticket, round-trip flight, and lodging. Applications are open through July 10, 2026, and all applicants will be notified of the decision by July 24, 2026.
WordCamp US 2026 will take place August 16–19, 2026, at the Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix, Arizona. Contributors, attendees, volunteers, organizers, and sponsors will come together to share ideas, learn from each other, and continue building the future of WordPress. For many contributors, attending in person creates new ways to collaborate, find support, and stay connected to the open source work that happens throughout the year.
To learn more about eligibility, visit the Kim Parsell Memorial Scholarship page (https://wordpressfoundation NULL.org/kim-parsell-memorial-scholarship/). Community members are encouraged to share this opportunity with contributors who may qualify. You can also learn more about attending WordCamp US 2026 on the WordCamp US tickets page (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/tickets/), explore volunteer opportunities (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/call-for-volunteers/), or review sponsorship opportunities (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/call-for-sponsors/).

- Global Partners Across the First Half of the 2026 WordPress Event Season (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/06/global-partners-first-half-2026/) June 18, 2026 Harmony Romo

This post recaps how the WordPress project’s five Global Partners — Jetpack, WordPress.com, WooCommerce, Bluehost, and Hostinger — supported community events during the first half of 2026. Across more than a dozen regional the first WordPress Developers Day (https://events NULL.wordpress NULL.org/novisad/2026/developer-day/), and a growing network of WordPress Campus Connect (https://events NULL.wordpress NULL.org/campusconnect/) events, Global Partners staffed booths, sponsored sessions, and connected with developers, freelancers, students, and agency owners around the world.
A global footprint
The year began in January with WordCamp Nepal (https://nepal NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026), where Jetpack joined the community in Kathmandu. The momentum carried into India, where WordCamp Kolhapur (https://kolhapur NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) and, a week later, WordCamp Pune (https://pune NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) brought Global Partners face-to-face with a student-heavy audience of roughly 200-250 attendees. In Pune, a session on connecting WordPress with AI workflows drew a large crowd, and attendees were curious about WordPress.com plans, new AI features, and Automattic for Agencies.

In February, Jetpack traveled to WordCamp Port Harcourt (https://portharcourt NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) in Nigeria, an inclusive and well-organized event with 256 attendees that featured talks on inclusion and accessibility. Locally produced swag was a standout success there, a reminder that the WordPress community’s reach extends well beyond Europe and North America.
Across Europe
Spring brought a wave of European events. At WordCamp Madrid (https://madrid NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026), with 280 attendees, WordPress.com served as a Global Sponsor and ran a Wapuu treasure hunt that drew 97 participants.

Down the coast in France, WordCamp Nice (https://nice NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) gave Jetpack a chance to connect with 247 freelancers and developers, an audience that appreciated concrete, easy-to-explain solutions and asked questions about newsletters, security, and Jetpack’s broader feature set.
WordCamp Vienna (https://vienna NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) stood out for its developer-heavy crowd of 277. From a Jetpack-branded booth staffed on both days, the team engaged with agencies and merchants, fielded numerous questions about WooCommerce and security, and booked 8 agency meetings. Many builders were interested to learn that Automattic stands behind both WordPress.com and WooCommerce. In Italy and Germany, WordCamp Torino (https://torino NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) and WordCamp Leipzig (https://leipzig NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) both reflected growing curiosity about AI, a theme that resurfaced throughout the year. At Leipzig, with 109 agencies, hosting companies, and freelancers in attendance, WordPress.com staffed a booth where tote bags were in high demand, while conversations kept returning to AI and WordPress Studio.
WordCamp Slovenia (https://slovenia NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026)and WordCamp Portugal (https://portugal NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) closed the European stretch. WordPress.com brought a booth to Ljubljana, and in Porto, it appeared with both a booth and logo presence alongside WooCommerce, which suited an event filled with e-commerce builders and Woo payment providers. The first WordPress Developers Day in Novi Sad introduced a new format, with Jetpack as a global sponsor and nearly 30 in-depth conversations on Jetpack, WooCommerce, performance, and the realities of client work.
Community in Uganda
In May, WordCamp Kampala (https://kampala NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026) brought four Global Partners onto the sponsor roster: Jetpack, WooCommerce, Bluehost, and WordPress.com. The event, themed “Tech for Social Good,” welcomed more than 200 attendees and reflected the energy of a fast-growing local community.
Support from Global Sponsors
Behind every one of these events is a layer of support that does not always appear at a booth. In 2026, Bluehost and Hostinger both joined the WordPress community sponsorship program (https://events NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sponsor/) as top-tier Global Sponsors, alongside Jetpack and WordPress.com. Their contributions help underwrite the global WordCamp program and the community events that make a year like this possible. That program-level backing is what allows organizers in Kathmandu, Porto, and Kampala to bring their events to life, and the WordPress community is grateful to every partner that invests at that scale.
Campus Connect reaches 6,200 students
One of the most notable stories of 2026 is not a WordCamp at all. It is WordPress Campus Connect (https://events NULL.wordpress NULL.org/campusconnect/). As of early June, the program has passed 6,200 students, with 25 events completed in 2026, 45 events all-time, and 42 more in planning or already scheduled. WordPress.com has played a direct support role throughout, including providing hosting for WordPress Campus Connect events around the world.
The connective tissue between these events and the broader community is real. An organizer first met at WordCamp Mukono went on to help lead WordPress Campus Connect work in Uganda. A student who built her first WordPress site at a WordPress Campus Connect event later attended a WordCamp. These events serve as a pathway for the next generation of WordPress contributors, builders, and professionals.
Looking ahead
If 2026 has shown anything, it is that interest in WordPress, and in the tools and services that Global Partners provide, continues to grow around the world. The questions being asked at booths and in sessions are sharper, the audiences more diverse, and the community’s reach more genuinely global. Thank you to Jetpack, WordPress.com, WooCommerce, Bluehost, and Hostinger for being part of that story this year, and to every organizer, volunteer, speaker, and attendee who made these events possible.
To find an upcoming event near you, visit WordCamp Central (https://central NULL.wordcamp NULL.org). To learn how organizations can support the WordPress project, see the community sponsorship program (https://events NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sponsor/).
- What Happened at WordCamp Europe 2026 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/06/wceu-2026-recap/) June 6, 2026 Nicholas Garofalo


WordCamp Europe, the biggest WordPress conference in Europe (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/), spent the first week of June in Kraków. The 2026 edition of this event filled the ICE Kraków Congress Centre from June 4 to 6, drawing 2,458 ticket holders from 81 countries to the south of Poland. Close to a quarter of them were attending their first WordCamp Europe.
The city made it easy to settle in. Every attendee’s badge carried a transport hologram good for unlimited trams and buses. The Main Market Square, the largest in Europe, sat a short ride away, and the local food ran the gamut from pierogi to żurek soup to obwarzanek pretzels sold off the street.
Kraków is beautiful, with history everywhere.
– Sebastian Miśniakiewicz, local team leadThe program kept pace with the setting. Across multiple tracks, the schedule held 49 talks and eight hands-on workshops, grouped into themes that ran from core development and AI to business and the open web. Around them sat a full Contributor Day, a sponsor area, side events, on-site childcare, and an after-party the local team stretched to eight hours.

Contributor Day Opens the Week
As it does every year, the event began the day before the talks. Contributors filled the venue for Contributor Day, a working session where people work together to improve WordPress itself rather than watch a presentation about it. The morning started with registration and a welcome, the room split into teams, and a group photo broke up the work around midday. The afternoon ran a second working block before each team gathered to share what it had done.









The range of tables is the clearest picture of how wide the project has become. Newcomers could sit down with Polyglots to translate WordPress into their own language, with Documentation to fix the pages people reach when they get stuck, or with Support to answer questions in the forums. More technical tables covered Core, Performance, Testing, Themes, and the Plugins team, whose reviewers screen every plugin submitted to the directory.
First-timers were not left to find their own way. The day was built around onboarding tables, named table leads, and mentors, with an open invitation for experienced contributors to adopt a newcomer and walk them through their first patch, string, or ticket.
People who could not travel to Kraków were welcomed to join remotely through the #contributor-day channel in the Make WordPress Slack (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/), so distance was not a reason to sit the day out.
The Birthplace of the Web
It was fitting that the opening keynote came from CERN. The European Laboratory for Particle Physics, on the French-Swiss border outside Geneva, is where the World Wide Web was invented more than 30 years ago, and Joachim Valdemar Yde (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/joachimv), who has managed CERN’s web team since 2021, came to explain why the laboratory had chosen WordPress to carry its web presence forward.
Yde and Francisco Borges Aurindo Barros (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/franciscobbarros), who leads CERN’s WordPress infrastructure, framed the move as a chance to give a web presence built up over three decades a shared, modern foundation. After evaluating several leading content management systems against CERN’s needs, WordPress came out on top.
Barros walked through what they had built. The guiding idea is that people at CERN focus on their content while the web team looks after the platform underneath. A self-service portal lets anyone request a site in a few clicks. Behind it, a shared distribution supplies a common theme and a set of approved, security-hardened plugins, and an in-house tool provisions each new site on Kubernetes in about a minute. In its first year, the platform has already set up hundreds of sites.
Moving years of existing content onto the new platform is the other half of the work, and the team automated it: a single command lifts each site’s pages, headings, and images and rebuilds them as Gutenberg blocks, with no downtime. They plan to open source the tool.
Then Yde delivered the line that the room had been waiting for.
As of today, our main flagship website, home.cern, is now served on WordPress. It’s been automatically migrated, and it’s live.
– Joachim Valdemar Yde, Web Manager, CERNThe rollout is on track to wrap up over the coming months, and early impressions, Yde said, have been overwhelmingly positive, with easy wins in responsiveness and accessibility. For those at the event, the keynote pointed the room toward a later talk by CERN’s Akanksha Chatterjee (https://youtu NULL.be/f09yvh3mnME) on building and maintaining the laboratory’s engineering websites on the same service.
There is a neat symmetry to it. The institution that published the world’s first website now runs on the software that powers more than 40% of today’s web, licensed under the GPL and maintained by the people in the room.
WordPress 7.0 and AI
WordPress 7.0 was a throughline of the conference. Several sessions placed the release at the center, framing it less as a routine update than as a change in what the software is, and in what it makes possible for the people who build with it.
The anchor for that conversation was a panel called “Inside WordPress 7.0.” It gathered contributors who worked on the release, among them Juan Manuel Garrido (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/juanmaguitar), Adam Silverstein (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adamsilverstein), Benjamin Zekavica (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/benjamin_zekavica), Sarah Norris (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mikachan), and Milana Cap (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/milana_cap). It was framed around more than a feature list, setting out to cover how a release of this size actually comes together: the contribution workflows, the coordination, and the human aspects of shipping software in the open.

What gives this release its weight is the work moving into WordPress’s core: a native AI client, a new Abilities API that lets plugins declare what they can do in a way other tools can discover, and a Connectors screen for wiring up providers such as OpenAI, Anthropic, or Google Gemini. The argument running through the AI sessions was that this belongs to everyone who builds on WordPress, not only to developers shipping their own integrations. Speakers got specific about how to put that to work.
- Anukasha Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/anukasha) focused on how the Abilities API can make plugin permissions cleaner and safer than the capability checks developers have leaned on for years.
- In a workshop, Vito Peleg (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wpfeedback) set out to take builders from one-off prompts toward a tool-using workflow that audits a live site and files structured tickets.
- Alain Schlesser (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/schlessera), a WP-CLI maintainer who has worked on structured data and the AI-native web, turned to a fast-growing opportunity. AI assistants and search now send real traffic to the open web, with more than a billion referral visits logged by the middle of 2025. His session framed WordPress as well-placed to earn that attention, with a practical checklist for getting a site ready to be found, read, and cited.
People stayed at the center of the conversation, too. Tammie Lister (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/karmatosed), in a talk called “Human in the loop means something,” framed the phrase as a real commitment rather than a checkbox. Humans and AI are each good at different things, and the products worth building let each do what it does best.
Development and Craft
The development sessions were where the craft lived. Dennis Snell (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/dmsnell), who co-wrote the HTML API and designed the block parser, devoted a deep-dive workshop to that API. Peter Wilson (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/peterwilsoncc), a long-time Core committer on the Performance team, focused on how the WP_Query class has been made faster through better caching, and how site builders can take advantage of that at scale.
Scaling got a hands-on session of its own. One talk set out to see how far a WordPress site can run on a twelve-dollar virtual server, profiling it under load in Grafana and tuning away the bottlenecks, with a GitHub repository so attendees could follow along at home. Fellyph Cintra (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fellyph) focused on the latest in WordPress Playground (https://playground NULL.wordpress NULL.net/), the browser-based tooling and architectural changes that the project credits with a real speed-up.
Jessica Lyschik (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/luminuu), a Core contributor and former default-theme co-lead, set out to make the case that accessibility-ready requirements are far easier to meet than most theme developers assume, drawing on real reviews of both block and classic themes.
Two members of the Plugins team, David Perez (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/davidperez) and Fran Torres (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/frantorres), framed their session as a practical clinic. Between them, they have reviewed more than 25,000 plugins, and they set out to name the common, avoidable issues that keep good plugins stuck in the review queue. For a first-time author, that is the difference between an afternoon and a month of waiting.
The Business of WordPress and the Open Web
The business and community sessions pulled the lens back to people, with a refreshingly unsentimental view of running a WordPress business. Debbie Levitt (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/deltacx) built her talk around a model for finding product-market fit at three levels at once, on the premise that teams celebrate one good metric and then wonder months later where their users went. Vassilena Valchanova (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vasvalch) took on a quieter problem: being good at the work is not the same as anyone knowing you are.
There was a local thread here as well. Irfani Silviana (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/irsilviana), a full-stack developer at a Kraków-based agency, framed the Business Model Canvas as a translation layer that moves developers from shipping features to engineering business value, a fitting talk to give in her own city.
The web’s standards, the argument goes, remain as open as the day Tim Berners-Lee created them at CERN.
That idea carried through the rest of the community sessions.
- David Snead (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wdavidsnead), an attorney who works with internet infrastructure providers, set out to explain how hosts, registrars, and registries coordinate against abuse through shared, real-time intelligence, on the logic that a threat to one WordPress host is a threat to all of them.
- Marcel Bootsman (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mbootsman) shared a practical playbook for how companies and individuals can support open source sustainably and look after the people who keep it going.
- Karin Christen (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/karinchristen) set out to describe how her Swiss agency turned Five for the Future (https://wordpress NULL.org/five-for-the-future/) from a good intention into a standing team habit through internal contributor days.
Running alongside the talks, the hands-on workshops were a chance to build something on the spot. In one, Ryan Welcher (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/welcher) set out to build a touch-enabled gallery slider with the Interactivity API, while another centered on Full Site Editing, with a working portfolio theme attendees could reuse on their next client project. These were laptop-open, leave-with-working-code sessions.


Closing Fireside Chat
The closing session opened with a warm gesture from Kraków University of Technology. Representatives took the stage to thank the organizers and the community and to present Mary Hubbard (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/4thhubbard), the Executive Director of WordPress, with a gift from their faculty of informatics and mathematics. They described what the university and the WordCamp community share: a love of learning and sharing knowledge, and an openness to new ideas, skills, and connections.
Hubbard used the moment to share some news. Starting in October, the university will open a WordPress-specific course, which she called a trail-blazing event for Poland and for WordPress. Earlier that day, the program’s first cohort, around 20 students, had shown what they built, part of the WordPress Campus Connect (https://wordpress NULL.org/education/campus-connect/) and WordPress Credits (https://wordpress NULL.org/education/credits/) education work.


Hubbard then turned the stage into a conversation, inviting Matías Ventura (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/matveb), the lead of the Gutenberg project, and Rich Tabor (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/richtabor), a WordPress designer and developer, to talk through where WordPress is heading and how AI fits in. WordPress 7.0 had just launched with Ventura as its release lead, and he asked everyone who had contributed to it to stand for a round of applause.
Much of the chat explored the balance between building WordPress with AI, and building with AI on WordPress, without losing the human part. Ventura noted that WordPress’s long investment in its design system is paying off now that you can ask an AI to extend a menu or a control, and it reaches for the right components. He pointed to older primitives gaining new value, like WP-CLI (https://wordpress NULL.org/cli/), which AI models use fluently, and to Studio Code (https://developer NULL.wordpress NULL.com/docs/developer-tools/studio/studio-code/), an open source, agent-based coding tool the team has been building for WordPress. Tabor showed how he now ships many small editor improvements by talking to an agent instead of typing code, and Ventura demoed desktop mode and open-canvas experiments that reimagine the admin.
On open source and AI, Hubbard argued that open source is why WordPress has thrived, that the same values should shape AI, and that the community should be far more vocal about it. As she put it, “We should be talking about it, and we should be much louder about it.”
Audience questions pushed on multilingual support, unsticking long-stalled tickets, and reaching a younger, more diverse community. On that last point, Hubbard came back to education, pointing to a US pilot of an AI literacy micro-credential (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/02/ai-leaders-credential/) that uses WordPress as the playground, and made the case for it:
I think that focusing in on younger generations, and bringing them into the project in a healthy way, with the dynamic of education as well as mentorship, and how we can understand and learn from them, as well as mentor them and adopt them as contributors, is very important.
– Mary Hubbard, WordPress Executive DirectorBeyond the Talks
WordCamp is also about the corridor outside the talks, and Kraków gave people reason to roam. Between sessions, attendees moved through the sponsor area for product demos and conversations that often carried on over lunch.






The after-party was the not-so-subtle flourish of a local team that doubled the usual length to eight hours, with Polish food and dragon-and-floral swag that nodded to the Wawel Dragon of Kraków legend. The nearby artistic Kazimierz district kept the evening going, and the trams, as one organizer had promised, were still running reliably afterward.
What Comes Next
WordCamps run on people, and 2026 was no different. The organizing teams, the speakers, the sponsors who funded the venue and the meals, the local crew who sorted trams and pierogi, and the contributors who arrived a day early to work on the project all built this WCEU together. The people watching the livestream (https://www NULL.youtube NULL.com/playlist?list=PL1pJFUVKQ7ET_os7azDwYFsUDoc0Y9plA) from outside Kraków were part of it as well.
For anyone whose appetite was only sharpened by three days in Poland, the calendar already has the next stop. WordCamp US 2026 (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/) (Phoenix, USA) runs August 16 to 19, with its own Contributor Day opening the week.
(https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/)WordCamp Europe will return next year (May 27-29, 2027) in Málaga, Spain.
Photography by the WCEU 2026 photography team (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/community/organisers/#photography-team). See the full galleries on Flickr (https://www NULL.flickr NULL.com/photos/wceu/albums/).
- Protect The Shire (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/06/pts/) June 5, 2026 Matt Mullenweg
tl;dr: Temporary 24-hour cooldown period for plugin/theme releases before auto-updates. AI can give defenders an edge. We want to secure all 78K plugins and themes on WordPress.org.
One of the things we’ve always striven to do as the developers of WordPress is to work harder so you don’t have to; we take technology that’s complex or inaccessible and make it available to everyone, running in as many environments as possible. It’s the Open Source way.
Just last December there was a step-change in coding ability (https://x NULL.com/karpathy/status/2026731645169185220) that rocked many developers, and since April’s reveal of Mythos (https://red NULL.anthropic NULL.com/2026/mythos-preview/), security activity has kicked into high gear. A few days ago, Chrome shipped a release with 429 security fixes (https://chromereleases NULL.googleblog NULL.com/2026/06/stable-channel-update-for-desktop NULL.html)! The threats and opportunities of these new capabilities inspired us to kick off an initiative we call Protect The Shire (hat tip J. R. R. Tolkien (https://www NULL.tolkiensociety NULL.org/discover/biography/)) with the aim of using our best minds and the infrastructure of WordPress.org to make all code in our directories and repositories as secure as possible.
Much of this work was and will remain behind the scenes, and we hope its success is defined mostly by what doesn’t happen. However, while we reckon with our newfound powers, we need to make space for review.
To Update or Not
WordPress core updates go through multiple people and layers of review before they go out, a process we’ve polished to a high art in the 18 years since we introduced one-click upgrades in 2.7 “Coltrane.” (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2008/12/coltrane/)
Core is solid, and I’m so proud that over 50% of all WordPress sites have upgraded to 7.0 within two weeks (https://wordpress NULL.org/about/stats/)! That’s the result of an unimaginable amount of work across thousands of hosts, developers, and teams across WordPress.org. We’ve pushed hard to make upgrades happen automagically, and as fast as possible.
We’re in a liminal period now, and I believe 2026 will be a year of tension between two approaches: updating as quickly as possible to stay secure, and holding back on updating to stay secure.
We’ve seen clever and dangerous supply chain attacks across the npm, PyPI, GitHub, and RubyGems ecosystems, and we even had our own mini-version with the Essential Plugins debacle (https://anchor NULL.host/someone-bought-30-wordpress-plugins-and-planted-a-backdoor-in-all-of-them/), where good plugins were unknowingly sold to a new author who had malicious intent.
How to balance security updates and securing updates?
Mirkwood or the Wild West?
Everyone knows the fun of WordPress is in its 78k+ plugins and themes. We have a rigorous, human-powered review process for theme (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/themes/handbook/review/) and plugin (https://developer NULL.wordpress NULL.org/plugins/wordpress-org/detailed-plugin-guidelines/) submissions, but once you’re published in the directory, you’re on your own. Our update system currently distributes every plugin and theme release as soon as a developer presses the button. That’s what keeps the directory as robust as WordPress itself. There were over 3,000 commits to the plugin repository yesterday!
For now, each new plugin release will wait up to 24 hours before being distributed through auto-updates. This will give everyone, including a new Wapuu (https://wapuu NULL.studio/wapuu/a-gandalf-wapuu-that-is-a-coding-wizard-302912b8/) we call Gandalf, a chance to review changes.
I expect 24 hours could be reduced to minutes as the process evolves, but we’ll err on the side of caution while AI models are advancing so rapidly.
Our plugin review team (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/plugins/) seems superhuman, but still needs to sleep. But bots don’t, and a depth of review that seemed unimaginable before is now a matter of time and tokens.
The security capabilities of AI are going to make the world weird and take a lot of our focus in the next few months, but there’s a light at the end of the tunnel.
Our Shire Is Special
There’s no shortage of ways to find, install, and update plugins and themes for WordPress. For those who choose WordPress.org, though, we want to make sure that it feels safe and secure. That means staying strict about some things—like guidelines and Open Source licenses—while also remaining flexible enough to allow solo hackers, community projects, and for-profit commercial plugins and themes to thrive in our ecosystem.
GitHub stars may get the hype, but if you add up all the numbers in our plugin directory (https://wordpress NULL.org/plugins/), it’s over 400M installs. There are 78k+ extensions, many from solo devs, installed on over a million sites each! Now we need to learn from the best parts of GitHub and make that available to every developer on WordPress.org.
Just because WordPress plugins have a reputation for vulnerabilities is no reason not to aim for the same security and stability we’ve achieved in core. We’ve done the impossible a few times already in our journey from a b2/cafelog fork (https://wordpress NULL.org/book/table-of-contents/) to where we are today (https://wordpress NULL.org/showcase/).
Freedom and security are not zero-sum. With Open Source, we can show how security comes from transparency, not obscurity. Collaboration over competition. What we accomplish when we come together is nothing short of incredible. Success always attracts bad actors, but we grow stronger through every adversity.
The scale of WordPress can make some challenges seem too big to tackle, but given time, there is no problem that’s insurmountable. I’m reminded of the story behind the title of Anne Lamott’s book Bird by Bird (https://www NULL.amazon NULL.com/Bird-Some-Instructions-Writing-Life/dp/0385480016):
Thirty years ago my older brother, who was ten years old at the time, was trying to get a report written on birds that he’d had three months to write, which was due the next day. We were out at our family cabin in Bolinas, and he was at the kitchen table close to tears, surrounded by binder paper and pencils and unopened books about birds, immobilized by the hugeness of the task ahead. Then my father sat down beside him, put his arm around my brother’s shoulder, and said, “Bird by bird, buddy. Just take it bird by bird.”
More to come, stay tuned. I wish everyone in Kraków at WordCamp Europe (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/) the best and hope to see you soon!
- WP23 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/wp23/) May 27, 2026 Matt Mullenweg
WordPress at 23 is simultaneously both the strongest and most precarious it’s ever been.
Last week, we shipped WordPress 7 to the world (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/armstrong/). In seven days, 46% of all WordPresses (https://wordpress NULL.org/about/stats/), tens of millions across countless different hosting environments, are already on 7.0, auto-updated with no breakage. From a Raspberry Pi (https://projects NULL.raspberrypi NULL.org/en/projects/lamp-web-server-with-wordpress) to the most secure sites in the world, like WhiteHouse.gov (https://www NULL.whitehouse NULL.gov/). Sit with that for a minute when you think of all the resources and all the projects that have had security problems in the past few weeks. No supply chain attacks, no security problems, just a stable, secure infrastructure doing its job invisibly to power a huge portion of the open internet.
I’m really proud of the capability and security of WordPress, and we should celebrate that. That accomplishment represents the work of thousands and thousands of people coming together to make the web a better place. Also, an iceberg of what is going on behind the scenes.
However, the release was not what I hoped it would be because so much time from key people was taken away by WP Engine’s (https://wpengine NULL.com/) attacks.
Silver Lake (https://www NULL.silverlake NULL.com/), in its immense 100B+ power, summoned a shoggoth (https://en NULL.wikipedia NULL.org/wiki/Shoggoth) in Quinn Emanuel (https://www NULL.quinnemanuel NULL.com/) that has been paperclip-maximizing legal torture that is not just going after Automattic (https://automattic NULL.com/) and WordPress.org (https://wordpress NULL.org/) and me personally, but this Golem Jagannath is now trying to dissolve the WordPress Foundation (https://wordpressfoundation NULL.org/) itself, a non-profit with no employees or payroll (https://projects NULL.propublica NULL.org/nonprofits/organizations/205498932) that supports WordCamps (https://central NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/) and Open Source education around the world (https://wordpress NULL.org/education/credits/).
If you know anyone at Silver Lake (https://www NULL.linkedin NULL.com/company/silver-lake/), Quinn Emanuel (https://www NULL.linkedin NULL.com/company/quinn-emanuel/), or WP Engine (https://www NULL.linkedin NULL.com/company/wpengine/) in that order, please beg, plead with them to stop the violence. End this internecine warfare that is threatening to destroy one of the last stalwarts of the Open Web.
It’s not fun and games anymore, not just business. This is having a real impact on people’s lives.
It took every ounce of will in my body, and I am grateful to thousands of hours of meditation, to not explode in rage when asked about pineapple on pizza and debating the meaning of Jean Baudrillard (https://en NULL.wikipedia NULL.org/wiki/Jean_Baudrillard) and “bastardized simalcra (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2024/09/wp-engine-banned/)” when miles away, my closest friend is in a hospital bed waiting for a heart transplant.
I have colleagues LITERALLY DYING (https://eric NULL.blog/2026/05/24/six-months/) I can’t be with because Silver Lake / Quinn Emanuel / WP Engine shoggoth is trying to make it seem like I am hiding or destroying evidence because we rotate logs on wordpress.org or I have disappearing chats on Signal with romantic partners (https://www NULL.therepository NULL.email/wp-engine-and-automattic-trade-accusations-of-withheld-evidence-in-flurry-of-court-filings). I don’t curse, but this is so f-ed up I don’t know what to say.
If you don’t know anyone at these entities, please pray, meditate, and call on whatever forces or divine interventions you can to bring this to an end.
I reached out multiple times to resolve this with open arms; I’ve extended every olive branch; and I’ve even said positive things about Silver Lake and WP Engine in the press, trying to bring this to a close. Heather Brunner would not even come into the same room with me.
All of this from a stupid presentation I gave at WordCamp US 2024 about how private equity can hollow out high-trust-based Open Source communities that in the past 19 months has only gotten 16k views on YouTube (https://www NULL.youtube NULL.com/watch?v=fnI-QcVSwMU).
Silver Lake, you have already extracted all your pounds of flesh. I missed my Mom’s knee surgery. If you wanted me to suffer for my sins, I have, and probably deeper than you will ever know. WordPress and WordPress.org, and yes, even my flawed leadership, are at the heart of what has made WP Engine successful so far. You have so much money and power, you just got TikTok, the Trump administration loves you (https://pe-insights NULL.com/trump-approves-14bn-tiktok-us-spin-off-with-oracle-silver-lake-and-kkr-as-investors/), you don’t need to control and take over WordPress, too. If you win, you destroy it, and then what? Please have mercy and stop trying to ruin people’s lives. Let’s move on.
- Looking Ahead to WordCamp Europe 2026 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/wceu-2026-sessions/) May 26, 2026 Brett McSherry

June 4-6, 2026 | ICE Kraków Congress Centre, Kraków, Poland
WordCamp Europe 2026 will bring the WordPress community together in Kraków, Poland, from June 4–6 for Contributor Day, two conference days, and a program shaped by the ideas, tools, and people moving WordPress forward. This year’s schedule includes two official keynotes, hands-on workshops, panels, and sessions across development, accessibility, artificial intelligence, content, search, business, education, security, and community.
The program offers a broad view of how WordPress is used today: as publishing software, a framework for building at scale, a tool for business growth, and a global open source project shaped by contributors around the world. Whether you build with WordPress, write for the web, support clients, teach new learners, or contribute to the project, WordCamp Europe offers a chance to learn from practical examples and connect them to the platform’s future.

Keynotes at WordCamp Europe 2026
The keynote sessions at WordCamp Europe 2026 will give attendees two ways to look at WordPress today: through a large-scale institutional adoption story and through a broader closing reflection on where the project is headed. These sessions anchor the program while connecting many of the themes that appear throughout the conference, from infrastructure and governance to contribution, innovation, and the future of the web.

Joachim Valdemar Yde and Francisco Borges Aurindo Barros will share how CERN is adopting WordPress as its future content management system (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/two-worlds-collide-wordpress-at-cern/). Their keynote will explore the governance, infrastructure, and migration work behind moving more than 800 websites onto a customized WordPress Service, offering a look at WordPress on an institutional scale.

Ma.tt Mullenweg will close WordCamp Europe 2026 with a broader look at WordPress, the open web, and the ideas shaping what comes next (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/closing-keynote/). As the event’s final keynote, this session will bring together many of the conversations happening across Contributor Day, sessions, workshops, and community gatherings throughout the week.
Program Themes to Watch at WCEU 2026
The rest of the WCEU themes are organized around topics that reflect the breadth of the WordPress ecosystem. These themes give attendees a way to follow the sessions most relevant to their work, from building better sites and improving content discovery to growing sustainable businesses, strengthening security, expanding access, and supporting the people and communities behind the project.
Search, Visibility, and Discovery
Search continues to change, but helping people find the right information remains central to the web. WCEU’s search and SEO sessions look at how AI-generated answers, generative engine optimization, shifting user habits, and new discovery platforms are changing visibility for publishers, businesses, and builders. Sessions include Panel: The Future of SEO (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/panel-the-future-of-seo/), with Kacper Bartoszak, Pam Aungst Cronin, Alex Moss, David Cuesta, and Jovana Smoljanovic Tucakov, as well as Emma Young’s AI Search: Why Your Whole Company Should Care (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/ai-search-why-your-whole-company-should-care/), which looks at why AI-native discovery now affects content, development, partnerships, and business strategy.
AI and the Future of Building
Artificial intelligence has a dedicated presence at WordCamp Europe 2026, with sessions that move beyond general discussion and into practical use cases for marketing, product work, development, and site management. Vito Peleg’s Agentic AI & WordPress: From Prompts to Tools & Systems (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/agentic-ai-wordpress-from-prompts-to-tools-systems/) will explore how teams can move from simple prompts to AI workflows that execute tasks, while Monika Dimitrova’s AI Won’t Save Your Marketing (but it might save your time and money) (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/ai-wont-save-your-marketing-but-it-might-save-your-time-and-money/) focuses on how small businesses can use AI without losing the strategy and identity that make their work effective.
Development and Technical Practice
Development sessions at WCEU will focus on how WordPress sites, tools, and workflows are built for long-term use. The program includes a Panel: Inside WordPress 7.0 (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/panel-inside-wordpress-7-0/), with contributors discussing the release, its features, and the process behind it, along with sessions such as Anukasha Singh’s Smarter Plugin Permissions with the Abilities API (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/smarter-plugin-permissions-with-the-abilities-api/), Ariel Ramos’s Headless WordPress API Security in 10 Minutes (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/headless-wordpress-api-security-in-10-minutes/), and Dejan Rudić Vranić’s hands-on workshop Build Your Developer Portfolio: A Hands-on Guide to FSE (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/build-your-developer-portfolio-a-hands-on-guide-to-fse/).
Accessibility and Inclusive Design
Accessibility is part of building a better web for everyone, and WCEU’s accessibility sessions give attendees practical ways to make digital experiences more usable, inclusive, and sustainable. This theme connects directly to WordPress’s project values, from how content is structured to how themes, plugins, and interfaces are designed. For designers, developers, content creators, and project leads, these sessions offer a chance to make accessibility part of everyday decisions rather than a final step at the end of a project.
Content, Writing, and Communication
Content and writing sessions at WCEU will focus on how clearer communication helps users find what they need, teams share what they know, and communities make information easier to understand. Pooja Sanwal’s Why Writing Still Matters in a Video-First Internet (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/why-writing-still-matters-in-a-video-first-internet/) looks at the role of written content as video continues to dominate online traffic, Fernando Tellado’s Do You Really Need an SEO/GEO Pugin for WordPress (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/do-you-really-need-an-seo-geo-plugin-for-wordpress/)? explores what WordPress can already do for visibility, and Birgit Olzem’s Documentation as a Love Language for the Future You (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/documentation-as-a-love-language-for-the-future-you/) looks at how simple documentation practices can help teams and communities preserve knowledge.
Security and Trust
Security remains central to maintaining websites people can rely on. WCEU’s security-focused sessions look beyond basic reminders and into the risks, systems, and decisions that shape safer WordPress experiences. The broader program includes talks on AI-assisted spam and bot detection (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/fighting-spam-and-bots-on-wordpress-with-ai/), plugin permissions, and secure headless WordPress architectures (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/headless-wordpress-api-security-in-10-minutes/), giving attendees practical ways to think about resilience, trust, and responsible site management.
Business and Sustainable Growth
The business sessions at WCEU will explore how WordPress professionals turn ideas, services, and products into sustainable work. Debbie Levitt’s Three Levels of Atomic Product-Market Fit (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/three-levels-of-atomic-product-market-fit/) looks at how teams can understand product-market fit beyond a single metric, Irfani Silviana’s WordPress ROI Map: Engineering Business Value with BMC (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/wordpress-roi-map-engineering-business-value-with-bmc/) connects technical decisions to business outcomes, and Liza Bogatyrev’s Stop Positioning Into Obscurity to Unlock Growth (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/stop-positioning-into-obscurity-to-unlock-growth/) focuses on how clearer positioning can support revenue and adoption.
Education, Contribution, and Community
WordPress grows when people can learn, participate, and find a place to contribute. WCEU’s education and community sessions include Panel: Rethinking Learning in WordPress (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/panel-rethinking-learning-in-wordpress/), featuring Mary Hubbard, Rade Jekic, Klaus Harris, Natalia Basiura, and Benjamin Zekavica, along with Daniel Grzonka’s The New Engineer: Psychology, Systems, and Open Source (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/the-new-engineer-psychology-systems-and-open-source/), Ivana Ćirković’s What It (Really) Means To Be a Part of the WP Credits Program (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/what-it-really-means-to-be-a-part-of-the-wp-credits-program/)?, and Jörg Pareigis’s Sovereign University AI Tutors Powered by WordPress (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/session/sovereign-university-ai-tutors-powered-by-wordpress/). Together, these sessions connect contributor onboarding, academic partnerships, open source learning, and the future skills people need to work with WordPress.
Explore the Full Program
WordCamp Europe 2026 will bring together many parts of the WordPress ecosystem in one place: software, publishing, business, design, education, and community. The keynotes and theme-based sessions offer a broad look at how WordPress is being used today and how contributors, builders, and users are preparing for what comes next.
Explore the full WordCamp Europe 2026 schedule (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/schedule/) and choose the sessions that match how you use, build, teach, support, or contribute to WordPress. Tickets are available now (https://europe NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/tickets/) for attendees joining the community in Kraków. All sessions will be live streamed. Keep checking back for updates.

Kraków is calling. See you at WordCamp Europe 2026!
- WordPress 7.0 “Armstrong” (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/armstrong/) May 20, 2026 Matias Ventura

Every WordPress release celebrates an artist who has made an indelible mark on the world of music. Say Hello to WordPress 7.0 “Armstrong”, named in honor of “Satchmo” himself, jazz musician Louis Armstrong.
Known as the “first great jazz soloist”, Louis Armstrong created ensembles that highlighted his own profound trumpeting skills, and in the process, transformed jazz from an orchestral art form into a solo art form. The master trumpeter also impressed the world with his signature vocals, introducing improvisation into Jazz, influencing every artist he worked with, and permanently changing the landscape of music.
Louis Armstrong wove his personal touch into the world of Jazz. With WordPress 7.0 “Armstrong”, you can build with yours.
Welcome to WordPress 7.0!
WordPress 7.0 marks the start of a new era, laying the foundation for AI across the WordPress experience. Greeting you with a modern, more intuitive dashboard, 7.0 introduces enhanced customization and development tools that inspire creativity and tap into endless potential.
Whether you’re a creator, business owner or developer – WordPress 7.0 let’s you create in a way that is uniquely your own.
What’s inside
Explore AI abilities directly in your website, all managed from a central hub. Slide seamlessly through the sleek, new admin theme implemented across the dashboard. Ignite creative flow with new blocks and design tools, and tap into an expansive developer toolbox that gives you more control than ever, letting you create your way.
AI-Integrated WordPress
Possibilities right in your hands.
With AI integrated throughout WordPress the potential is endless. A new AI Client in Core lets WordPress communicate with generative AI models, while connections are easily managed from a single hub in the dashboard. The AI Client combined with the Abilities API makes a fiery duo that introduces new functionality, workflow automation, and creation tools to your website. Install the new AI plugin to expand your options even more: generate and edit images, create titles or excerpts, or even suggest alt text.
7.0 also includes a new Client-Side Abilities package: a Javascript counterpart to the Abilities API, with a built in UI and command palette that delivers extensive new and hybrid AI abilities.

Manage all your external connections in a central hub on the Connector’s screen. Easily dive in with 3 presets, or add your own connections. Authenticate and get started with AI abilities in just a few clicks.

An AI-integrated WordPress promises infinite potential, ready to be discovered.
Modernized Dashboard
Elevate your admin experience.
7.0 introduces a fully revitalized dashboard with a chic, modern new color scheme, and clean finishes throughout.
Polished with smooth transitions that seamlessly shift as you move between screens, you’ll feel like you’re effortlessly gliding through the dashboard.
Just one click of the new Command Palette shortcut, a
⌘KorCtrl+Kicon in the upper admin bar, lets you access your favorite tools from anywhere in the dashboard.
Explore typography from one place, regardless of theme. Install, upload and manage your font collection from the new dedicated font management page, with support for block, hybrid and classic themes.

Visually scrub through revision versions to see what changed at a glance, with markers that make editorial choices more intuitive. Easily pick the revision you want and restore instantly.

Design, Create, Customize
A simpler way to build.
Let WordPress be your muse with new blocks, block supports, and design tools that add visual agility, granular control, and keep every element of your website on brand, with fresh new touches.
Showcase your ideas in a lightbox slideshow with the new gallery block, and finesse your markup with the new Heading block. Deliver clear site navigation with the new Breadcrumbs block, and add more detail to your designs with the new Icons block.

Enhanced responsiveness controls in 7.0 make your site more user friendly. Hide and reveal blocks based on device, without affecting other viewports.

Design and build your menu overlay with blocks and patterns, fully customizable with the styles you want visitors to see. Add columns, stylize typography, or embed your own close button in the overlay. Start with a template or create your own menu from scratch.

Fine tune page design and layout with Patterns that act as a single unit, detachable for more isolated control. Insert your pattern, swap elements and customize with ease.

Style every detail of content with custom CSS at the block level, right in your post or page.

Developer’s toolbox
Advanced tools for building your way.
WordPress 7.0 lets you build faster, better, stronger, and easier with an extensive set of expanded APIs and enhanced functionality.
Create blocks and patterns on the server level using only PHP, auto-registered with the block API.
Explore a more extensible Site Editor, with routing, route validation, and a new wordpress/boot package that allows plugins to build custom site-editor pages.
And much more
For a comprehensive overview of all the new features and enhancements in WordPress 7.0, please visit the feature-showcase website.
Check out whats new in 7.0 (https://wordpress NULL.org/download/releases/7-0)
Learn more about WordPress 7.0
Learn WordPress (https://learn NULL.wordpress NULL.org/) is a free resource for new and experienced WordPress users. Learn is stocked with how-to videos on using various features in WordPress, interactive workshops (https://learn NULL.wordpress NULL.org/social-learning/) for exploring topics in-depth, and lesson plans for diving deep into specific areas of WordPress.
Read the WordPress 7.0 Release Notes (https://wordpress NULL.org/documentation/wordpress-version/version-7 NULL.0) for information on installation, enhancements, fixed issues, release contributors, learning resources, and the list of file changes.
Explore the WordPress 7.0 Field Guide (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/2026/05/14/wordpress-7-0-field-guide/) and learn about the changes in this release with detailed developer notes to help you build with WordPress.
The 7.0 release squad
Every release comes to you from a dedicated team of enthusiastic contributors who help keep things on track and moving smoothly. The team that has led 7.0 is a global, cross-functional group of contributors who are always ready to champion ideas, remove blockers, and resolve issues.
- Release Lead: Matias Ventura (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/matveb/)
- Release Coordination: Ahmed Kabir Chaion (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chaion07/), Amy Kamala (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amykamala/), Mary Hubbard (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/4thhubbard/)
- Tech Leads: Ella van Durpe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ellatrix/), Mukesh Panchal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mukesh27/), Sergey Biryukov (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sergeybiryukov/)
- Triage Leads: Jb Audras (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/audrasjb/), JuanMa Garrido (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/juanmaguitar/)
- Test Leads: Ankit K Gupta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ankit-k-gupta/), Mary Baum (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/marybaum/)
Thank you, contributors
The mission of WordPress is to democratize publishing (https://wordpress NULL.org/about/) and embody the freedoms that come with open source (https://opensource NULL.org/osd-annotated). A global and diverse community of people collaborating to strengthen the software supports this effort.
WordPress 7.0 reflects the tireless efforts and passion of more than 875+ contributors in countries all over the world. This release also welcomed over 200+ first-time contributors!
Their collaboration delivered more than 420 enhancements and fixes, ensuring a stable release for all – a testament to the power and capability of the WordPress open source community.
1000camels (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/1000camels/) · Aakash Verma (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aakashverma1/) · Aaron Jorbin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/jorbin/) · Aaron Robertshaw (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aaronrobertshaw/) · Abdullah Kaludi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/abdullah17/) · Abdur Rahman Emon (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/abduremon/) · Abhay Kulkarni (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/hiabhaykulkarni/) · Abhishek Deshpande (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fitehal/) · acmoifr (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/acmoifr/) · Adam (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/dannythedog/) · Adam Silverstein (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adamsilverstein/) · Adam Zieliński (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/zieladam/) · Adil Öztaşer (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/oztaser/) · adithyanaik (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adithyanaik/) · Aditya Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/iamadisingh/) · Adnan Hyder Pervez (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adnanhyder/) · adnan.limdi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adnanlimdi/) · adrianpiedra (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adrianpiedra/) · adrmf25 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/adrmf25/) · afwebdev (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/afwebdev/) · Agnieszka Szuba (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/agnieszkaszuba/) · Ahmed (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/elazzabi/) · Ahmed Kabir Chaion (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chaion07/) · aileenf (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aileenf/) · Ajit Bohra (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ajitbohra/) · Aki Hamano (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wildworks/) · Akshat Kakkad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/akshat2802/) · Albert Juhé Lluveras (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aljullu/) · Alec Rust (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alecrust/) · alecgeatches (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alecgeatches/) · Alex Concha (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/xknown/) · Alex Kirk (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/akirk/) · Alex Lende (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ajlende/) · Alex Sanford (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alexsanford1/) · Alex Stine (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alexstine/) · Alexander Bigga (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/albigdd/) · Ali Aghdam (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aliaghdam/) · Allan Espinoza (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/allanespinoza/) · Alvaro Gómez (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mrfoxtalbot/) · amanandhishoe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amanandhishoe/) · Amber Hinds (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alh0319/) · Ames Plant (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amesplant/) · Amibe Websites (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amibe/) · Amin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amin7/) · Amit Raj (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amitraj2203/) · Amy Kamala (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/amykamala/) · Anand Rajaram (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/altf4falt/) · Anastis Sourgoutsidis (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/anastis/) · Anders Norén (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/anlino/) · Andrea Fercia (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/afercia/) · Andrea Roenning (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/awetz583/) · Andrei Draganescu (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/andraganescu/) · Andrei Lupu (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/euthelup/) · Andrew Duthie (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aduth/) · Andrew Nacin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/nacin/) · Andrew Ozz (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/azaozz/) · Andrew Ryno (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/andrewryno/) · Andrew Serong (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/andrewserong/) · Andrew Wilder (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/eatingrules/) · Andrija Vučinić (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aidvu/) · André Maneiro (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/oandregal/) · Anh Tran (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rilwis/) · Ankit K. 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(https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/buutqn/) · Béryl de La Grandière (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/beryldlg/) · Calin Don (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/calin/) · Carlo Cannas (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/karl94/) · Carlos Bravo (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/cbravobernal/) · Carolina Nymark (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/poena/) · cbirdsong (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/cbirdsong/) · cgastrell (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/cgastrell/) · Chelsea Otakan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chexee/) · Chi-Hsuan Huang (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chihsuan/) · Chris Lilitsas (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/xristos3490/) · Chris McElroy SEO (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chrismcelroyseo/) · Chris Zarate (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/czarate/) · chrisdotdotdot (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chrisdotdotdot/) · chrispecoraro (https://profiles 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Erlendsson (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/egill/) · Ehti (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ehti/) · elemrr (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/elemrr/) · Ella van Durpe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ellatrix/) · Emerson Maningo (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/codex-m/) · Enrique Sánchez (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/nrqsnchz/) · Eric Michel (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ytfeldrawkcab/) · Erick Hitter (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ethitter/) · Erick Wambua (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/r1k0/) · ericmacknight (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ericmacknight/) · Eshaan Dabasiya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/im3dabasia1/) · Esteban (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ecairol/) · Estela Rueda (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/estelaris/) · Evan Solomon (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/evansolomon/) · Fabian Kägy (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fabiankaegy/) · Fabricio (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fcartin22/) · Faisal Ahammad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/faisalahammad/) · Faisal Alvi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/faisal03/) · Fakhri Azzouz (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fakhriaz/) · Farhad Sakhaei (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/farhad0/) · feli22 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/feli22/) · Felipe Velzani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/felipevelzani/) · Felix Arntz (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/flixos90/) · Fellyph Cintra (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fellyph/) · Fernando Tellado (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fernandot/) · Firoz Sabaliya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/firoz2456/) · Florence ANDROLUS (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fandevelop/) · Florian Brinkmann (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/florianbrinkmann/) · Francisco Leiton (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chiscoleiton/) · Francisco Vera (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fcoveram/) · Franck VANHOUCKE (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vanhoucke/) · franckmee (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/franckmee/) · Fransisca H (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/franz00/) · Fredrik Forsmo (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/frozzare/) · frOM (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/from/) · fushar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fushar/) · Gajendra Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/gajendrasingh/) · Garrett Hyder (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/garrett-eclipse/) · Gary Jones (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/garyj/) · Gary Pendergast (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pento/) · Gaurang Sondagar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/gaurangsondagar/) · Gautam Garg (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/gautammkgarg/) · Gautam Mehta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/gautam23/) · geminorum (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/geminorum/) · Generosus (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/generosus/) · George Mamadashvili (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mamaduka/) · Gergely J (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/gmjuhasz/) · gierand (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/gierand/) · giuliorubelli (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/giuliorubelli/) · Glen Davies (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/glendaviesnz/) · Gopal Krishnan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ingeniumed/) · Graham Armfield (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/grahamarmfield/) · Grant M. 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(https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/lumiblog/) · patrickwclanden (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/patrickwclanden/) · Paul Bearne (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pbearne/) · Paul Biron (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pbiron/) · Paul English (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/bbpaule/) · Paul Kevan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/paulkevan/) · Pavan Patil (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pavanpatil1/) · Pavel Ciorici (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ciorici/) · Pavel Vybíral (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vybiral/) · pavelevap (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pavelevap/) · penelopeadrian (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/penelopeadrian/) · Per Søderlind (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pers/) · Peter Rubin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/provenself/) · Peter Wilson (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/peterwilsoncc/) · peter8nss (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/peter8nss/) · petitphp (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/petitphp/) · Phil Johnston (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/johnstonphilip/) · philhoyt (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/philhoyt/) · Philip (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vheemstra/) · Philip Jackson (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/philipmjackson/) · Phuc Nguyen (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/manhphucofficial/) · Pierre Lannoy (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pierrelannoy/) · Pieterjan Deneys (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/nekojonez/) · Piyush Patel (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/piyushpatel123/) · pmbs (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pmbs/) · poligilad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/poligilad/) · Pooja Kakkad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pooja-n/) · Pooja Killekar (Muchandikar) (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pooja1210/) · poojapadamad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/poojapadamad/) · porg (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/porg/) · Pradeep Pasam (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/gaisma22/) · prajapatvishnu (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/prajapatvishnu/) · Pranav Yeole (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pranavyeole/) · Pranjal Pratap Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pranjalpratapsingh/) · Prasad Karmalkar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/prasadkarmalkar/) · Prashant Baldha (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pmbaldha/) · Prathamesh Bhagat (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/prathameshbhagat1511/) · Pratik Jain (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pratik-jain/) · Pratik Londhe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pratiklondhe/) · Pratik Nawkar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/pratiknawkar94/) · Presskopp (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/presskopp/) · Priyanka Gusani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/priyankagusani/) · psorensen (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/psorensen/) · qhaensler (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/qhaensler/) · Rabbi Islam rony (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ronya4927/) · rachid84 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rachid84/) · Rafael Della (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rafaeldella/) · Rafael Miranda (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rafa8626/) · rafaelkr (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rafaelkr/) · Rahan Al Rashid (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rahan00123/) · Rahul Kumar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ekla/) · Rahul Prajapati (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rahulsprajapati/) · Rahul Tank (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rahultank/) · Raj Chauhan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chauhanraj754/) · Rajan Vijayan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rajanit2000/) · Rajdip Tank (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rajdiptank111/) · ralphonz (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ralphonz/) · Raluca (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ralucastn/) · Ramon Ahnert (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rahmohn/) · Ramon Corrales (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rcorrales/) · Ramon James (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ramonopoly/) · Rashed Hossain (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wprashed/) · Ravi Chudasama (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ravichudasama01/) · Ravi Gadhiya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ravigadhiyawp/) · Ravi Khadka (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ravikhadka/) · rcrdortiz (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rcrdortiz/) · Rebeen Sarbast (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rebeensarbast/) · Rejaul Alom Khan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rejaulalomkhan/) · Renatho (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/renathoc/) · Retno Nindya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/retnonindya/) · retrofox (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/retrofox/) · Riad Benguella (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/youknowriad/) · riadev (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/riadev/) · Rian Rietveld (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rianrietveld/) · Ricardo S. (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ricjcs/) · Rich Tabor (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/richtabor/) · Rinkal Pagdar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rinkalpagdar/) · Rishabh Gupta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rishabhwp/) · Rishav Dutta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rishavdutta/) · Rishi Mehta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rcreators/) · Rishit Gupta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rishit30g/) · RM Shiblee Mehdi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shibleemehdi/) · Robert Anderson (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/noisysocks/) · Robert Chapin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/miqrogroove/) · Robert O’Rourke (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sanchothefat/) · Robin van der Vliet (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/robinvandervliet/) · Rodrigo Primo (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rodrigosprimo/) · Rohan Jha (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/geekofshire/) · Rolly Bueno (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rollybueno/) · Romain Menke (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/romainmrhenry/) · Ronnie Burt (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/burtrw/) · Roy Tanck (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/roytanck/) · Rutuja Paramane (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rutujaparamane2004/) · Rutvik Savsani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/rutviksavsani/) · Ruud (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ruba1956/) · Ryan Welcher (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/welcher/) · SACHINRAJ CP (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sachinrajcp123/) · Sagar Deshmukh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sagardeshmukh/) · Sagar Jadhav (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sagarjadhav/) · Sagar Ladani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sagarladani/) · Sageth (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sageth/) · Sainath Poojary (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sainathpoojary/) · Sajjad Hossain Sagor (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sajjad67/) · Sal Ferrarello (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/salcode/) · Sam (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/samueljseay/) · samiamnot (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/samiamnot/) · Sampat Viral (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/viralsampat/) · Sana Yasir (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sanayasir/) · Sandeep Dahiya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sandeepdahiya/) · Sandip Sinh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sandipsinh007/) · sandipmaurya2611 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sandipmaurya2611/) · SAndrew (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/andrewssanya/) · Sanket Parmar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sanketparmar/) · Sara (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sarayourfriend/) · Sarah Norris (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/mikachan/) · sarah semark (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tinkerbelly/) · Saransh Sinha (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/saranshsinha/) · Sarath E (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/saratheonline/) · Sarthak Jaiswal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sarthak8858/) · Saul Fougnier (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sfougnier/) · saurabh.dhariwal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/saurabhdhariwal/) · Saxon Fletcher (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/saxonafletcher/) · Scott Kingsley Clark (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sc0ttkclark/) · scribu (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/scribu/) · se02vas (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/se02vas/) · Sean Wei (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/seanwei/) · Sergey Biryukov (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sergeybiryukov/) · Sergey Mochalov (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vyatka/) · Seth Rubenstein (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/smrubenstein/) · Shadi Sharaf (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shadyvb/) · Shahi Ferdous (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ferdoused/) · Shail Mehta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shailu25/) · Shalin Shah (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sh4lin/) · shanemac10 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shanemac10/) · Shashank Shekhar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shekh0109/) · Shatrughan Myatra (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shatrumyatra/) · shaunandrews (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shaunandrews/) · Shazzad Hossain Khan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sajib1223/) · shekharnwagh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shekharnwagh/) · Shivam Jha (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/whiteshadow01/) · Showrav Hasan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/showravhasan/) · Shraboni (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shraboni/) · Shreya Shrivastava (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shreya0shrivastava/) · Shubh Mittal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shubhtoy/) · Shubham Patil (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/iamshubhamsp/) · shuvo586 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shuvo586/) · Sidhant Tomar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sidhanttomar/) · sidharthpandita (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sidharthpandita/) · Silas Köhler (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/silaskoehler/) · siliconforks (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/siliconforks/) · silvanarnet (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/silvanarnet/) · sky_76 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sky_76/) · skylarkcob (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/skylarkcob/) · slrslr (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/slrslr/) · Sonali Prajapati (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sonaliprajapati/) · Sophie Caperaa (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sophiecaperaa/) · Sourabh Jain (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sourabhjain/) · Sourav Pahwa (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sourav08/) · Soyeb Salar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/soyebsalar01/) · Spencer Finnell (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/spencerfinnell/) · Sphere Plugins (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/emptyopssphere/) · staggerlee (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/staggerlee/) · Stanko Metodiev (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/metodiew/) · Stefan Pasch (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/hubersen/) · Stefan Velthuys (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/stefanvelthuys/) · stefanfisk (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/stefanfisk/) · Stefano Minoia (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ryokuhi/) · Stephen Bernhardt (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sabernhardt/) · Stephen Edgar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/netweb/) · Steve Burge (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/stevejburge/) · Steve Dufresne (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/dufresnesteven/) · Steve Mosby (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/malgra/) · Stoyan Georgiev (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/stoyangeorgiev/) · strarsis (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/strarsis/) · Stuart Langridge (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/aquarius/) · studio_m (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/studiomondiale/) · styankov (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/styankov/) · Subrata Sarkar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/subrataemfluence/) · Suhel-Shaikh-Mohammad (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/suhel5047/) · Sukhendu Sekhar Guria (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sukhendu2002/) · Sumit Bagthariya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sumitbagthariya16/) · Sumit Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sumitsingh/) · Sunil Kumar Sharma (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sunilkumarthz/) · sunyatasattva (a11n) (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sunyatasattva/) · susiyanti (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/susiyanti/) · Swanand M (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/swanandm/) · swoyamjeetcodes (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/swoyamjeetcodes/) · Sybre Waaijer (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/cybr/) · Syed Tarikul Islam (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/riko910/) · Sérgio Gomes (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sergiomdgomes/) · Sören Wünsch (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/soean/) · tainacan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tainacan/) · Takashi Irie (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/iamtakashi/) · Takashi Kitajima (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/inc2734/) · Takshil Kunadia (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/takshil/) · Tammie Lister (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/karmatosed/) · tanbirali (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tanbirali/) · Tanvirul Haque (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tanvirul/) · Tapan Kumer Das (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/voboghure/) · Tejas Gajjar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/suhan2411/) · the.pro (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/azora/) · thejaymo (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/thejaymo/) · thelmachido a11n (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/thelmachido/) · them.es (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/themes-1/) · TheViv (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/octotoot/) · Thomas Kräftner (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/kraftner/) · Thorsten Frommen (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tfrommen/) · threadi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/threadi/) · Tim Wright (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/timwright12/) · Timi Wahalahti (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/sippis/) · Timothy Jacobs (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/timothyblynjacobs/) · Tobias Bäthge (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tobiasbg/) · Toby Cryns (@themightymo) (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/themightymo/) · Tom Auger (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tomauger/) · Tomoki Shimomura (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/shimotomoki/) · Toni Viemerö (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/skithund/) · Tonya Mork (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/hellofromtonya/) · Torsten Landsiedel (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/zodiac1978/) · Tosin Oguntuyi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/spiraltee/) · Troy Chaplin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/areziaal/) · Trupti Kanzariya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/truptikanzariya/) · Tsvetan Tsvetanov (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/alerzhus/) · Tung Du (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/dinhtungdu/) · TuomasL (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tule/) · Tushar Bharti (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tusharbharti/) · Tushar Patel (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tusharaddweb/) · Ugyen Dorji (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/ugyensupport/) · Ulrich (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/grapplerulrich/) · Umesh Nevase (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/umeshnevase/) · Umesh Singh (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/umeshsinghin/) · up1512001 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/up1512001/) · Utsav Ladani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/utsavladani/) · Vaibhav Singh Web (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vaibhavsweb/) · Valentin Grenier (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/valentingrenier/) · Valérie Galassi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/valer1e/) · Van Ons Open Source (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vanonsopensource/) · Vania (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/twvania/) · Vasco Daniel Baião (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vascobaiao/) · Velda (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/supernovia/) · vgnavada (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vgnavada/) · vietcgi (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vietcgi/) · Viktor Szépe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/szepeviktor/) · Vincent Breton (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vincentbreton/) · Vipul Gupta (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vipulgupta003/) · Vishal Kakadiya (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vishalkakadiya/) · Vishit Shah (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vishitshah/) · vishnu prajapat (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vishnuprajapat/) · Vrishabh Jasani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/vrishabhsk/) · Waqas Safdar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/waqassafdar/) · WebCartisan (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wooxperto/) · webtasky (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/george9/) · WebTechee (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/gauri87/) · Weston Ruter (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/westonruter/) · WFMattR (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wfmattr/) · Will Skora (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/skorasaurus/) · WinsleyJ (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/winsleyj/) · wiuempe (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wiuempe/) · wolf45 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wolf45/) · wongjn (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wongjn/) · WPExplorer (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wpexplorer/) · wplmillet (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wplmillet/) · wpsoul (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wpsoul/) · WraithKenny (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/wraithkenny/) · X-Raym (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/x-raym/) · xate (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/xate/) · xavilc (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/xavilc/) · xwolf (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/xwolf/) · Yagnik Sangani (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/yagniksangani/) · Yannis Guyon (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/yguyon/) · Yash B (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/getsyash/) · Yash Jawale (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/yashjawale/) · Yogesh Bhutkar (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/yogeshbhutkar/) · Yui (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/fierevere/) · Yusuf Mudagal (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/yusufmudagal/) · zoe20 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/zoe20/) · Zunaid Amin (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/zunaid321/) · zuveria (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/zuveria/) · Łukasz Strączyński (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/lstraczynski/)
More than 70 locales have fully translated (https://translate NULL.wordpress NULL.org/stats/) WordPress 7.0 into their language. Community translators are working hard to ensure more translations are on their way. Thank you to everyone who helps make WordPress available in 200+ languages.
Thank you to the more than 21 web hosts (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/hosting/test-results/) that have tested pre-release versions for WordPress 7.0, helping ensure that WordPress and hosting platforms are fully compatible, free of errors, and optimized for the best possible user experience.
Last but not least, thanks to the volunteers who contribute to the support forums (https://wordpress NULL.org/support/forums/) by answering questions from WordPress users worldwide.
Get involved
Participation in WordPress goes far beyond coding. And learning more and getting involved is easy. Discover the teams that come together to Make WordPress (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/) and use this interactive tool (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/contribute/) to help you decide which is right for you.
- WordPress 7.0 Release Candidate 4 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/wordpress-7-0-release-candidate-4/) May 14, 2026 Amy Kamala
The fourth Release Candidate (“RC4”) for WordPress 7.0 is ready for download and testing!
This version of the WordPress software is under development. Please do not install, run, or test this version of WordPress on production or mission-critical websites. Instead, it’s recommended that you evaluate RC4 on a test server and site.
Reaching this phase of the release cycle is an important milestone. While release candidates are considered ready for release, testing remains crucial to ensure that everything in WordPress 7.0 is the best it can be.
You can test WordPress 7.0 RC4 in four ways:
Plugin Install and activate the WordPress Beta Tester (https://wordpress NULL.org/plugins/wordpress-beta-tester/) plugin on a WordPress install. (Select the “Bleeding edge” channel and “Beta/RC Only” stream.) Direct Download Download the RC4 version (zip) (https://wordpress NULL.org/wordpress-7 NULL.0-RC4 NULL.zip) and install it on a WordPress website. Command Line Use this WP-CLI (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/cli/) command: wp core update --version=7.0-RC4WordPress Playground Use the WordPress Playground instance (https://playground NULL.wordpress NULL.net/?php=8 NULL.0&wp=beta&networking=no&language=&multisite=no&random=y4q1rn88xn) to test the software directly in your browser. No setup required – just click and go! The scheduled final release date for WordPress 7.0 is May 20, 2026. The full release schedule can be found here (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/2026/04/22/wordpress-7-0-release-party-updated-schedule/). Your help testing Beta and RC versions is vital to making this release as stable and powerful as possible. Thank you to everyone who helps with testing!
Please continue checking the Make WordPress Core blog (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/) for 7.0-related posts (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/tag/7-0) in the coming weeks for more information.
What’s in WordPress 7.0 RC4?
Want to look deeper into the details and technical notes for this release? Take a look at the WordPress 7.0 Field Guide (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/2026/05/14/wordpress-7-0-field-guide/). For technical information related to the issues addressed since RC3 (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/wordpress-7-0-release-candidate-3/), you can browse the following links:
- Closed 7.0 WordPress Core Trac tickets (https://core NULL.trac NULL.wordpress NULL.org/query?status=closed&changetime=05%2F08%2F2026 NULL. NULL.05%2F14%2F2026&milestone=7 NULL.0&group=component&col=id&col=summary&col=milestone&col=changetime&col=type&order=id) since May 8, 2026
- 7.0 Gutenberg commits (https://github NULL.com/WordPress/gutenberg/commits/wp/7 NULL.0?since=026-05-08&until=2026-05-14) since May 8, 2026
How you can contribute
WordPress is open source software made possible by a passionate community of people collaborating on and contributing to its development. The resources below outline various ways you can get involved with the world’s most popular open source web platform, regardless of your technical expertise.
Get involved in testing
Testing for issues is crucial to the development of any software. It’s also a meaningful way for anyone to contribute. Your help testing the WordPress 7.0 RC4 version is key to ensuring that the final release is the best it can be.
This detailed guide (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/test/2026/02/20/help-test-wordpress-7-0/) will walk you through testing features in WordPress 7.0.
For those new to testing, follow this general testing guide (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/test/handbook/get-setup-for-testing/) for more details on getting set up.
If you encounter a potential bug or issue, please report it to the Alpha/Beta area (https://wordpress NULL.org/support/forum/alphabeta/) of the support forums or directly to WordPress Trac (https://core NULL.trac NULL.wordpress NULL.org/newticket) if you are comfortable writing a reproducible bug report. You can also check your issue against a list of known bugs (https://core NULL.trac NULL.wordpress NULL.org/tickets/major).
Curious about testing releases in general? Follow along with the testing initiatives in Make Core (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/test/) and join the #core-test channel (https://wordpress NULL.slack NULL.com/messages/core-test/) on Making WordPress Slack (https://wordpress NULL.slack NULL.com/).
Help translate WordPress
Do you speak a language other than English? ¿Español? Français? Русский? 日本語? हिन्दी? বাংলা? मराठी? ಕನ್ನಡ? You can help translate WordPress into more than 100 languages (https://translate NULL.wordpress NULL.org/projects/wp/dev/). This release milestone (RC4) marks the hard string freeze (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/polyglots/handbook/glossary/#hard-freeze) point of the 7.0 release cycle (https://make NULL.wordpress NULL.org/core/2026/03/25/wordpress-7-0-release-candidate-phase/).
An RC4 haiku
Step into the next,
bold, new era of WordPress.
Seven-oh is blessed.
Props to @chaion07 (https://profiles NULL.wordpress NULL.org/chaion07/) for proofreading and review.
- Get Your WordCamp US 2026 Tickets (https://wordpress NULL.org/news/2026/05/wcus-2026-get-tickets/) May 14, 2026 Brett McSherry

August 16–19, 2026, Phoenix Convention Center – Phoenix, Arizona
Tickets are now available for WordCamp US 2026, taking place August 16–19, 2026, at the Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix, Arizona. The flagship event brings together people from across the WordPress community to learn, contribute, share ideas, connect with contributor teams, and help shape the future of an open source project that powers over 40% of the web.
Tickets are limited. Secure yours today!WordCamp US is designed for people at many points in their WordPress journey, including contributors, developers, designers, marketers, publishers, business owners, educators, students, and anyone who wants to learn more about WordPress. This year’s event will include Contributor Day, where attendees can work alongside contributor teams and learn how to take part in the project; Showcase Day, which highlights real-world uses of WordPress; and two full days of sessions and workshops. The programming will also explore how artificial intelligence is changing the way people create, publish, build, and maintain digital experiences, with WordPress as an important part of that broader conversation.
Gather in Phoenix
This year also brings WordCamp US to downtown Phoenix, where the Phoenix Convention Center (https://www NULL.phoenixconventioncenter NULL.com/) is close to restaurants, museums, theaters, galleries, live music, and the Roosevelt Row Arts District (https://www NULL.visitphoenix NULL.com/greater-phoenix/phoenix/downtown-phoenix/roosevelt-row/). Attendees can stay near the venue, meet with other community members between sessions, and explore a downtown area served by Valley Metro Rail (https://www NULL.valleymetro NULL.org/how-to-ride/rail). For those extending their trip, Phoenix also offers access to the wider Sonoran Desert region, including parks, gardens, and outdoor spaces that make the city a distinct setting for this year’s event.










Choose the Ticket That Fits
Several ticket options are available, giving attendees different ways to join or support the event:
- General Admission: A $100 ticket that includes access to all four days of WordCamp US programming, including Contributor Day, Showcase Day, sessions, workshops, lunch and snacks, sponsor booths, and the community social.
- Student: A $25 ticket for students who want to learn more about WordPress, connect with mentors and community members, explore open source contribution, and build practical experience.
- Micro-Sponsor: A $750 ticket that includes the same access and attendee benefits as General Admission while helping support the true cost of the event. Micro-Sponsors will also be listed on the official WordCamp US Sponsors page.
Full ticket details, including refund information, visa support, dietary accommodations, registration requirements, and other attendee information, are available on the ticket page. You can also follow the WordCamp US 2026 website (https://us NULL.wordcamp NULL.org/2026/news/) for updates on the schedule, speakers, travel information, and more as the event gets closer.

Wo gibts den besten Doener Kebap in Berlin?
Die Geschmaecker sind ja bekanntlich unterschiedlich, aber ich moechte ein paar gute Beispiele in unserer Heimatstadt geben:
1: Hasir Restaurants (http://www NULL.hasir NULL.de/index NULL.html)
Fuer alle, die es wuerzig und qualitativ sehr hochwertig moegen.
Hasir ist eine Restaurant-Kette mit sechs Restaurants in Berlin und ist bei unseren Tuerken besonders beliebt. Fuenf der sechs Lokale sind empfohlen:
- Hasir Kreuzberg, Adalbertstr.10, 10999 Berlin
- Hasir Ocakbasi, Adalbertstr.12, 10999 Berlin
- Hasir Wilmersdorf, Nürnbergerstr.46, 10789 Berlin
- Hasir Spandau, Breitestr.43, 13597 Berlin
- Hasir Mitte, Oranienburger Str.4, 10178 Berlin
Die Preise sind ueberdurchschnittlich und ein Doener Kebap kostet in etwa 2,70 EUR. Einer der Spezialitaeten, die du probieren solltest, ist der Duerum Doener.
2. Balli Doener
Fuer alle, die sehr hungrig sind 🙂
Die Spezialitaet ist hier der sehr grosse Duerum Doener mit Pommes und du solltest unbedingt die Knoblauchsauce dazu waehlen. Der Preis liegt bei 3,00 EUR. Du solltest ein Bild machen, um es zu Hause zeigen zu koennen 😉
- Balli Doener Tempelhof, Tempelhofer Damm 146, 12099 Berlin Tempelhof
- Balli Doener Spandau, Moritzstraße 2, 13597 Berlin
3. Grill Bosporus
Fuer alle, die die klassische Variante wollen.
Dieser Imbiss war urspruenglich dafuer bekannt, dass hier sehr viele junge Leute nachts herkamen. Die Preise sind moderat und ein Doener kostet ca. 2,30 EUR.
- Grill Bosporus, Wilmersdorfer Straße 105, 10629 Berlin
4. YE-MC Doener
Ein weiterer guter lokaler Imbiss in Spandau. EIn Doener Kebap kostet 2,60 EUR.
- YE-MC Doener, Streitstraße 57, 13587 Berlin
Where do I get the best Doener Kebap in Berlin?
Tastes are different for people but just want to give some good examples here in our home town:
1: Hasir Restaurants (http://www NULL.hasir NULL.de/eng/index NULL.html)
For people looking for a spicy style and best quality.
Hasir is a restaurant chain with six restaurants in Berlin and it’s one of the famous restaurants of our Turkish people here. Five of them are recommended:
- Hasir Kreuzberg, Adalbertstr.10, 10999 Berlin
- Hasir Ocakbasi, Adalbertstr.12, 10999 Berlin
- Hasir Wilmersdorf, Nürnbergerstr.46, 10789 Berlin
- Hasir Spandau, Breitestr.43, 13597 Berlin
- Hasir Mitte, Oranienburger Str.4, 10178 Berlin
The prices are over average and a Doener Kebap is about 2.70 EUR. One of the specialities you should try is the Duerum Doener.
2. Balli Doener
For very hungry people 🙂
The specility is the very large Duerum Doener with french fries in it and you should chose the garlic souce with it. The price is 3.00 EUR. You should take a picture to show it at home 😉
- Balli Doener Tempelhof, Tempelhofer Damm 146, 12099 Berlin Tempelhof
- Balli Doener Spandau, Moritzstraße 2, 13597 Berlin
3. Grill Bosporus
For people looking for the classic style. This one is originally known to be visited by many many young people at night. The prices are moderate, a Doener Kebap is about 2.30 EUR.
- Grill Bosporus, Wilmersdorfer Straße 105, 10629 Berlin
4. YE-MC Doener
Another good local one in Spandau. An Doener Kebap costs 2.60 EUR.
- YE-MC Doener, Streitstraße 57, 13587 Berlin
Renovierung unseres zweiten Bades
Im Zuge der passiven Schallschutzmaßnahmen an unserem Haus wurde u.a. die gesamte Innendämmung des Daches neu gedämmt. Dies führte nun zwangsläufig zu einer früheren Renovierung unseres zweiten Bades als geplant. Die Fliesen an Wand und Decke sowohl die zusätzliche Beplankung mit Rigipsplatten wurden von mir abgerissen und die Sanitärobjekte entfernt. Anschliessend wurde die Decke wie im gesamten Obergeschoss durch die beauftragte Baufirma abgerissen und das alte Dämmmaterial entfernt. So weit der Abriss, das Ergebnis ist auf dem ersten Bild zu sehen.
Es folgt der Wiederaufbau…
Nach dem Abriss wurde durch die Baufirma ein neues schall- und wärmegedämmtes Kunstofffenster eingebaut, die Decke neu isoliert und mit Rigips beplankt. Da eine Schallisolierung der Aussenwände nur in den Schlafräumen durchgefuehrt wurde, habe ich mich dazu entschlossen, hier im Bad analog zu den anderen Zimmern eine Vorsatzwand mit 60cm Dämmwolle, Dampfbremse und 2-facher Rigipsbeplankung aufzustellen. Vorher mussten noch die Rohrleitungen fuer die Badewanne und das Bidet in die Wand integriert werden. Somit ist nun das gesamte Obergeschoss mit der gleichen Dachdämmung, Fenstern und Aussenwänden versehen.
Man sieht nun schon die Anschlüsse für das Bidet und die Duschbadewanne. Wir haben uns dazu entschieden, die Abseitenwand zu verkürzen, damit die Badewanne näher an die Dachschräge und damit komlett rechts neben das Fenster passt. Somit ist die Aufstellung einer Duschwand moeglich, welche dann mit dem Fenster abschliesst. Es ist zugegebenermaßen ziemlich eng, aber wir wollten auch hier eine Duschmöglichkeit schaffen und eine andere Plazierung wäre noch unvorteilhafter. Die Fussbodenheizungsrohre wurden übrigens bereits beim Hausbau relativ wild unter der Originalbadewanne verlegt, das entstammt also nicht meiner künstlerischen Hand 😉 Das Loch in der Abseite soll spaeter einem Regal dienen, damit durch Ausschrauben des Regals jederzeit ein Zugang zu den dahinterliegenden Rohren moeglich ist. Ist zweckmäßig und schoener als eine Tür bzw. Klappe.
Weitergehen sollte es jetzt eigentlich mit dem Einbau der Badewanne. Beim Ueberholen des WC-Spülkastens gab es jedoch eine Ueberraschung. Der Absperrhahn im Spülkasten wurde undicht und musste nun ausgetauscht werden. Leider ist das Rohr, an dem dieser Absperrhahn befestigt ist, sehr dünn und zudem nicht richtig in der Wand befestigt. Hier musste ich mir jetzt professionelle Hilfe holen, damit das Rohr in der Wand keinen Schaden erlitt und die Wand wieder geöffnet werden musste.
Durch Erhitzen des Absperrhahns konnte dieser losgeloest und durch einen neuen ersetzt werden. Das war vom Fachmann innerhalb von 15 Minuten erledigt und ich war wieder 50 EUR ärmer 😉
Nun habe ich jedoch gleich einen Holzklotz eingeklebt, an dem das Rohr befestigt wurde. Die Innereien des Spülkastens wurden jetzt von mir erneuert, sodass der ganze Spülkasten nun wieder fast wie neu ist 🙂
Nach diesem ungeplannten Ausritt konnte es nun mit dem Einbau der Badewanne weitergehen. Die Badewanne wurde zuerst auf die Wannenfüße gestellt, am Zu- und Abwasser angeschlossen und getestet. Alles dicht 🙂
Also alle Maße aufgenommen und die Wanne wieder demontiert. Zuerst wurde nun die hintere Mauer unter der Dachschräge als Wannenrandabstützung hochgemauert und an der Aussenwand eine Holzlatte in der Waage montiert.
Die vordere Mauer wurde nun ca. 6 cm breiter als der Wannenrand hochgemauert, aber ca. 1-2 cm niedriger als der geplante Wannenrand. Somit konnte die Mauer nun eingeschalt werden und durch Gießestrich exakt in der Waage aufgefüllt werden.
Als Vorbereitung wurden nun noch die Wände im Badewannenbereich wasserfest versiegelt und auch schon die Decke mit Latexfarbe geweisst.
Die Badewanne ist auch schon mit Seitenstreifen versehen und wartet nur noch darauf in Silikon eingesetzt zu werden.
Das erste Befüllen der Badewanne bzw. das Ablassen des Wassers hat gezeigt, dass das Wasser nicht schnell genug abläuft. Die Ursache hierfür liegt in dem Bodenabfluss, wo der Abfluss der Badewanne integriert ist. Hier wird der Zufluss so stark im Durchmesser beschränkt, dass es sich zurückstaut. Auch mit der vorherigen Badewanne hatten wir diese Erfahrungen schon gemacht. Daher habe ich mich kurzerhand entschlossen, den Bodenabfluss stillzulegen und das Abflussrohr unter der Badewanne neu in die Abseite zu verlegen und von dort in das Hauptabwasserrohr zu leiten. Somit konnte ich gleich eine Reinigungsklappe integrieren, an die ich später jederzeit durch die Abseitenöffnung herankomme.
Dieses zusätzliche Abflussrohr hat den Raum unter der Badewanne allerdings noch weiter verengt, sodass es nun schwierig wird, nach dem Einbau der Badewanne, die Wannenfüße in der Höhe zu verstellen.
So, alles ist gut gegangen, nach einigen Verrenkungen ist es nun auch gelungen, die Wannenfüße in der Höhe zu verstellen. Die Seitenwände wurden nun noch mit Rigips verkleidet und der vordere Wannenrand schon mit Silikon abgedichtet.
Somit ist nun alles fertig zum Fliesen des Bades 🙂
Nun gibt es endlich auch sichtbare Ergebnisse…
Es dauert bei mir zwar etwas länger als beim Profi, aber es geht voran. Pro Wand brauche ich ca. einen Tag. Die erste Wand war besonders zeitaufwendig wegen der vielen Anschlüsse für das WC, das Waschbecken, die Steckdosen und Schalter, sowie die Einrahmung des Spiegels.
Die zweite Wand ist komplett ohne Ausparungen, aber auf Grund der grossen Fläche hab ich auch hier einen Tag bebraucht.
Auf der Fensterseite ist mir nun ein kleiner Fehler unterlaufen. Als wir uns nach einer kleinen Kaffeepause das bereits Geschaffte anschauten, wurde ich berechtigterweise gefragt, warum denn die Borduere rechts neben dem Fenster nicht weiter verlaufe?? Oops…durch die Unterbrechung der Borduere durch das Fenster, hab ich doch schlichtweg vergessen, diese weiterzufuehren. Also die frisch gelegten Fliesen (ca. 2qm) wieder runter. Ein paar wenige konnten gerettet und wiederverwendet werden, aber die meisten mussten sowieso neu zugeschnitten werden.
Der Rest klappte dann Gott sei dank reibungslos und erstaunlich problemlos, auch beim anschliessenden Verfugen.
Bei den Bodenfliesen habe ich mich nun zum ersten Mal entschlossen, diagonal zu fliesen. Hier hab ich dann auch lieber etwas mehr Zeit in die Verlegeplanung investiert, sodass z.B. die Fliesen diagonal von der Badewannenecke aus verlaufen und an der Tuer mit voller Groesse anfangen.
Trotz der Fliesenhaerte lassen sich die Bodenfliesen doch relativ gut brechen und alles verlaeuft reibungslos. Eine Haelfte am ersten Tag und die andere Haelfte am naechsten Tag. Ich bin sehr zufrieden mit dem Resultat.
Nach abschliessendem Vefugen der Bodenfliesen und dem Versiegeln aller Randfugen mit Silikon geht es nun weiter mit dem Einkleben des Spiegels (Vorsicht: Nur speziellen Spiegelkleber verwenden, ansonsten kann der Spiegel blind werden!!), dem Anbringen der Objekte und der Armaturen, Lampen etc.
Bis auf wenige “Kleinigkeiten”, wie z.B. Duschtrennwand, Fensterbank, Handtuchhalter etc. ist es nun vollbracht: Das Bad ist jetzt mehr oder weniger fertig!!!
…Feierlaune kommt auf 🙂
Auch nach vielen Wochen freue ich mich jetzt jedes Mal, wenn ich in das Bad komme. Eigentlich gibt es nichts, was ich nachtraeglich anders machen wuerde, oder was nicht voll und ganz meinen Vorstellungen entspricht.
Ueber Geschmaeker laesst sich ja bekanntlich streiten, uns war jedoch ein zeitloses und helles Bad wichtig, und das haben wir glaube ich ganz gut hinbekommen.
Unser neuer Hauseingang
So sieht unser Hauseingang derzeit noch aus. Nachdem sowohl die Fenster durch weisse Kunstofffenster mit Waermeschutz ersetzt als auch der Giebel sowie die Dachueberstaende weiss gestrichen wurden, mag der mahagonifarbene Hauseingang nicht mehr so recht passen. Zudem muss auch die Haustuer noch gegen eine waermegeschuetzte Variante ausgetauscht werden. Daher entschlossen wir uns gleich zu einem kleinen Anbau incl. neuem Fenster und Haustuer sowie einer neuer Treppe. Die Entstehung und die Baufortschritte moechte ich nach und nach dokumentieren.
Der Start wird sich noch ein wenig verzoegern, da mein derzeitiges Projekt mit der Renovierung unseres Bades im Obergeschoss noch nicht abgeschlosen wurde.
Stay tuned…
Die Zukunft des Transrapids
Das Patent von Herman Kemper zur Magnetschwebebahn liegt nun schon mehr als 75 Jahre (1934) zurück, dennoch hat sich diese Technologie trotz überzeugender Vorteile gegenüber der herkömmlichen Rad-Schiene-Technik bis heute noch nicht am Markt durchsetzen können. Gründe hierfür sind vor allem politisches Versagen sowie wirtschaftliche Interessen der Rad-Schiene-Lobby.
Eine erste Anwendungsstrecke Hamburg-Berlin (http://de NULL.wikipedia NULL.org/wiki/Magnetschnellbahn_Berlin%E2%80%93Hamburg) wurde bereits 1992 in den Bundesverkehrswegeplan aufgenommen und der Bau 1997 auch durch das Verkehrsministerium (Finanzminister Wissmann) beschlossen. Trotz dem Bundeskanzler Gerhard Schröder seinen Wählern 1998 die Realisierung dieser Anwendungsstrecke Hamburg-Berlin versprochen hatte und diese auch in den Koalitionsvertrag aufgenommen wurde, hat sich die rot-grüne Bundesregierung im Jahr 2000 schliesslich gegen den Bau der Strecke entschieden. Es waren bereits 18 der 20 Abschnitte des Planfeststellungsverfahren für Hamburg-Berlin fertig, doch das Planfeststellungsverfahren wurde nicht Ruhen gelassen, sondern wurde aufgehoben! Einer möglichen späteren Wiederaufnahme wurde somit jegliche Grundlage entzogen.
Wie kam es nun zu diesem Ausstieg?
Als vorgeschobene Begründung musste die Finanzierungslücke zwischen der ursprünglich geplanten und im Koalitionsvertrag festgeschriebenen 6,1 Mrd. DM (3,1 Mrd. Euro) und der nun geschätzten Kosten von 7,6 Mrd. DM (3,9 Mrd. Euro) herhalten. Generell wird der Transrapid in der Presse meist mit hohen Kosten in Verbindung gebracht. Zu Unrecht, denn bereits oberflächliche Recherchen machen deutlich, dass die Herstellungskosten einer Transrapid-Strecke keineswegs höher als die einer ICE-Neubaustrecke, die Wartungskosten der TR-Strecke jedoch erheblich geringer sind. Die einseitig negative Darstellung in der Presse beruht daher vermutlich auf anderen wirtschaftliche Interessen. Es geht um viel Geld, um sehr viel Geld. Die Rad-Schiene-Lobby hat grosses Interesse daran, solange als möglich an ihrer nun an physikalische Grenzen stossende Technologie zu verdienen. Durch die jahrzehntelange Anwendung bzw. Vermarktung existieren feste Geschäftsbeziehungen und Strukturen, die ein Eindringen einer Konkurrenztechnologie zu verhindern wissen. So wurde für den Transrapid auch erstmalig ein neues Finanzierungskonzept nach dem Public Private Partnership (http://de NULL.wikipedia NULL.org/wiki/Public_Private_Partnership)-Modell ausgewählt, um privates Kapital zu mobilisieren. Ein fairer Wettbewerb zwischen Transrapid und Bahn wurde somit frühzeitig verhindert. Die hohe Beteiligung der Deutschen Bahn an der Finanzierung führte dann schliesslich auch zum Ausstieg der Bahn aus dem Projekt, zwei Monate nach dem Mehdorn das Amt des Vorstandsvorsitzenden der Deutschen Bahn übernommen hat. Mehdorn distanzierte sich so auch gleich vom gesamten Projekt Transrapid und nicht nur von der Strecke Hamburg-Berlin.
Zum Vergleich wurden im Jahre 1995 für die ICE-Strecke von Frankfurt nach Köln 7,75 Mrd. DM (3,9 Mrd. Euro) eingeplant. Nicht nur die Fertigstellung verschob sich um zwei Jahre auf August 2002, sondern auch die Gesamtkosten stiegen auf 6 Mrd. Euro an. Der Kostenanstieg hatte aber im Gegensatz keinerlei Auswirkungen auf das Projekt.
Dies macht deutlich, dass die gestiegenen Planungskosten für die Transrapidstrecke Hamburg – Berlin nicht der alleinige Grund für das Scheitern dieses Projektes gewesen sein können.


