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Download our exclusive 10-Point WP Hardening Checklist: http://bit.ly/10point-wordpress-harde... WordPress Discussion Settings Walkthrough Out of all the settings pages the WordPress Discussion Settings have the most options, at least on a stock WordPress installation. Let's go through them one by one. First we have the Default Article Settings. If you check the first box then whenever you publish a article that has a link out to another websites your WordPress site will attempt to notify the site that you linked to them. These will create pingbacks and trackbacks. The next option, when checked, will allow other WordPress sites to notify your site when they've linked to you. This will create pingbacks and trackbacks on your website. The next check box is self-explanatory. When the "Allow people to post comments on new articles" is checked people will be able to leave comments on new articles. Easy. The next section is Other Comment Settings. The first option forces every comment author to fill in their name and email address. If this is unchecked then the name and email address fields won't be present. The next option, when checked, will for people to log in before they can leave a comment. The next option is an interesting one. It allows you to set the number of days after an article is published that comments will be automatically closed on that article. This may seem like a strange option, but let me explain why it exists. If you have a following that actively comments the vast majority of comments will come within the first few weeks of publishing your article (often the first few days). Following that time frame you end up receiving A LOT of spam comments and not very many real comments any more. This option can save you a lot of time in comment management. Next option: Enable Threaded (Nested) Comments. You can choose whether you want to allow Nested Comments where replies to comments are indented and the replies to the replies are further indented. You can also choose how many levels of indentation you want to allow. Keep in mind that with each indent the comment space is reduced and you may end of with very long and skinny comments. The next option allows you to break comments into pages and set how many comments are loaded per page and in which order. This is to help you manage your server workload better. Each comment that is loaded is a request to the database. If your website gets A LOT of comments (think thousands on each article) then that's thousands of database requests. That sort of traffic can easily slow your site down to a crawl if you have a lot of people on there at once. Since most people don't even read the comments its a good a idea to only load a few of them (50 at most) and then let the people who want to read more comments choose to load more. The next section is Email Whenever: 1. Anyone posts a comment 2. A comment is held for moderation That one is pretty self-explanatory. The next section is easy too. Before a comment appears: 1. Comment must be manually approved 2. Comment author must have a previously approved comment The first checkbox allows you to filter spam and trolls. The second checkbox allows you to essentially reduce your comment moderation workload by assuming if someone made one good comment the next one should be good as well. Next is the Comment Moderation section. If you don't require all comments to be moderated then this section allows you to selectively hold comments moderation based on certain characteristics. Often spam comments have multiple links so you can hold for moderation all comments that have a certain number of links that you determine. In the field below the first option you can hold for moderation all comments that contain any of the words or IPs you have listed there. Below that you have the Comment Blacklist. Comments that contain any of the words, IPs or URLs in the blacklist field will be immediately blacklisted and marked as spam or put into the trash. That's it for the WordPress Discussion Settings. I hope this information helps you! If you have any questions leave a comment below or ping me @WPLearningLab on Twitter. Check out my other WordPress settings tutorials: General Settings: • WordPress General Settings Walkthroug... Writing Settings: • WordPress Writing Settings Walkthroug... Reading Settings: • WordPress Reading Settings Walkthroug... Discussion Settings: • WordPress Discussion Settings Walkthr... Media Settings: Permalink Settings: • WordPress Permalink Settings Walkthro... -------------- If you want more excellent WordPress information check out our website where we post WordPress tutorials daily. http://wplearninglab.com/ Connect with us: WP Learning Lab Channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_c... Facebook: / wplearninglab Twitter: / wplearninglab Google Plus: http://google.com/+Wplearninglab Pinterest: / wplearninglab