Wordpress plugins
Obfuscate Email

Obfuscate Email

Version : 3.5.1
Tested up to : 4.5.10
Number of download : 44991
Author : Scott Reilly
Average rating : 3.5 / 5 on 10 votes 10 votes, 3.5 avg.rating

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Obfuscate Email
Obfuscate Email
Obfuscate Email
Obfuscate Email

Obfuscate email addresses to deter email harvesting spammers, while retaining the appearance and functionality of hyperlinks. “Obfuscation” simply means that techniques are employed to modify email address strings that appear on your site in such a way that bots scraping your site are unable to identify those addresses; however, at the same time those emails addresses should still look and work correctly for visitors, as much as possible. The plugin allows for use of one or more (or all!) of three proven techniques for email protection. While techniques abound for email obfuscation, the three techniques included empirically provide you with the best balance of email address protection with minimal impact on visitors. You can decide on a technique by technique basis which ones you’d like to employ as some have potential drawbacks. The plugin’s settings page allows you select which techniques to use. See Filters section for c2c_obfuscate_email_filters for complete list of filters that are processed. Please read the Details section of this documentation to learn more about the techniques employed. Details The email obfuscation techniques included in this plugin were chosen for their effectiveness and general applicability with minimal impact on users. I urge you to read about an experiment performed by Silvan Mühlemann in which he protected email addresses using nine different techniques. He ensured the page containing those email addresses got indexed by Google and then waited 1.5 years. During that time he measured the amount of spam received to each of the email addresses. Three techniques stood out as having received zero spam emails during that time. Two of those three techniques are included in this plugin. The fourth of his techniques is also included even though it did get a very small amount of spam — the technique was still very effective and more importantly does not rely on users to have CSS or JavaScript enabled. The techniques are as follows. Two are enabled by default. Weigh the requirements against what you’re comfortable requiring of visitors in order for them to see and make use of email addresses you post on your site. (For all the examples below, assume you have the link <a href="mailto:person@example.com">person@example.com</a> in your post.) Changing text direction with CSS (not enabled by default) How does it work? The email addresses are sent reversed in the markup. Using CSS, the text gets reversed so that visitors see the email addresses as intended. Email scrapers don’t recognize the emails in their reversed form and don’t typically utilize a CSS engine to help determine how text would look onscreen. Uses CSS? Yes, which means if a visitor does not have CSS enabled, the emails will appear backwards to them. Uses JavasScript? No. Can visitor copy-n-paste the link from onscreen text without needing to make modifications? No, text copied in such a manner will be reversed. However, a right-click -> “copy link/email address” will work properly for linked email addresses. Does this protect emails appearing in mailto: links and within HTML tag attributes? No. How effective is this? In the aforementioned experiment, no spam emails were received when using just this technique. Example: <a href="mailto:person@example.com"><span class="codedirection">moc.elpmaxe@nosrep</span></a> Using CSS display:none How does it work? Garbage text, wrapped in span tags, is inserted into any displayed email addresses. Using CSS, the text gets hidden so that visitors see the email addresses as intended. Email scrapers don’t typically utilize a CSS engine to help determine how text would look onscreen. Uses CSS? Yes, which means if a visitor does not have CSS enabled, the emails will appear with extra text in them. Uses JavasScript? No. Can visitor copy-n-paste the link from onscreen text without needing to make modifications? Yes (unless they have CSS disabled). Does this protect email addresses appearing in mailto: links and within HTML tag attributes? No. How effective is this? In the aforementioned experiment, no spam emails were received when using just this technique. Example <a href="mailto:person@example.com">person@<span class="displaynone">null</span>example.com</a> Replacing the `@` and `.` characters How does it work? The @ and . characters are replaced with alternative strings, such as AT and DOT, respectively. The exact replacements are configurable on the plugin’s settings page. By default, if you don’t specify custom replacements, the plugin will use entity substitution (@ becomes @ and . becomes .). Uses CSS? No. Uses JavasScript? No. Can visitor copy-n-paste the link from onscreen text without needing to make modifications? No, though it should (hopefully) be clear to the user what they need to replace. Does this protect emails appearing in mailto: links and within HTML tag attributes? Yes, though if you specify custom replacement strings visitors clicking on a mailto link will have to modify the email address that shows up in their mail program. How effective is this? In the aforementioned experiment, almost no spam emails were received when using just this technique. However, this technique does not require the support of any particular client-side techniques (CSS or JavaScript). Examples Custom AT and DOT replacements <a href="mailto:personATexampleDOTcom">personATexampleDOTcom</a> <a href="mailto:person@DELETETHISexample.com">person@DELETETHISexample.com</a> Everything encoded (aka hexadecimal HTML entity substitution) person@example.com How it looks If all techniques are enabled at once, the resulting obfuscation of the example link above is (for the full effect, view this in the page’s source): <a href="mailto:person@example.com"><span class="codedirection">moc.elpmaxe<span class="displaynone">null</span>@nosrep</span></a> However, in your browser it would appear to you as it does prior to obfuscation, and the link for the email would still work. Theoretically, however, spammers would have a somewhat more difficult time harvesting the emails you display or link to in your posts. NOTE: (Only when using the custom replacement feature will visitors need to modify the email address for use in their email program.) Links: Plugin Homepage | Plugin Directory Page | Author Homepage Template Tags The plugin provides one optional template tag for use in your theme templates. Functions function c2c_obfuscate_email( $text, $args = array() ) Arguments $text Required argument. The text and/or HTML that contains email addresses that you want to be obfuscated. $args Optional argument. An array of configuration options, each element of which will override the plugin’s corresponding default setting. encode_everything (boolean) : Encode all characters in the email address using hexadecimal HTML entity substitution? use_text_direction (boolean) : Utilize CSS text direction technique? use_display_none (boolean) : Utilize CSS display:none technique? at_replace (string) : String to use in place of @ in email addresses (used only if encode_everything is false) dot_replace (string) : String to use in place of . in email addresses (used only if encode_everything is false) Examples Basic usage. Obfuscate email addresses in $text according to current plugin settings. Override all plugin default settings when obfuscating email addresses in $text and just use text direction technique. true, ‘use_display_none’ => false, ‘encode_everything’ => false, ‘at_replace’ => ”, ‘dot_replace’ => ”) ) ); ?> Filters The plugin exposes one filter for hooking. Typically, customizations utilizing this hook would be put into your active theme’s functions.php file, or used by another plugin. c2c_obfuscate_email_filters (filter) The ‘c2c_obfuscate_email_filters’ filter allows you to customize what filters to hook to be filtered with email obfuscation. The following filters are all filtered by default: link_description link_notes bloginfo nav_menu_description term_description the_title the_content get_the_excerpt comment_text list_cats widget_text the_author_email get_comment_author_email Arguments: array $filters : the default array of filters Example: /** * Also obfuscate emails appearing in custom field values. * * @param array $filters Filters that get filtered to obfuscate email addresses. * @return array */ function change_c2c_obfuscate_email_filters( $filters ) { $filters[] = 'the_meta'; return $filters; } add_filter( 'c2c_obfuscate_email_filters', 'change_c2c_obfuscate_email_filters' );

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