Wednesday 24 July 2013

Understanding User Roles and Capabilities

Before you start adding new users to your site, you need to understand the
differences among the user roles because each user role is assigned a differ-
ent level of access and grouping of capabilities to your blog, as follows:
✦ Subscriber: The default role. Maintain this role as the one assigned to
new users, particularly if you don’t know who’s registering. Subscribers
get access to the Dashboard page, and they can view and change the
options in their profiles on the Your Profile and Personal Options page.

(They don’t have access to your account settings, however — only to

their own.) Each user can change her username, e-mail address, pass-
word, bio, and other descriptors in her user profile. The WordPress
database stores subscribers’ profile information, and your blog remem-
bers them each time they visit, so they don’t have to complete the pro-
file information each time they leave comments on your blog.
✦ Contributor: In addition to the access Subscribers have, Contributors
can upload files and write, edit, and manage their own posts. Contributors
can write posts, but they can’t publish the posts; the administrator
reviews all Contributor posts and decides whether to publish them. This
setting is a nice way to moderate content written by new authors.
✦ Author: In addition to the access Contributors have, Authors can pub-
lish and edit their own posts.
✦ Editor: In addition to the access Authors have, Editors can moderate
comments, manage categories, manage links, edit pages, and edit other Authors’ posts.
✦ Administrator: Administrators can edit all the options and settings in
the WordPress blog.
✦ Super Admin: This role exists only when you have the Multisite feature
activated in WordPress — see Book VIII for more about the Multisite
feature.

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