• Resolved pedrorafael

    (@pedrorafael)


    Hello guys,

    is it normal for Wordfence to request all users for email verification? I would also like to know if I can choose this check for administrators only?

    I couldn’t identify where to fix it, this is causing an inconvenience for my clients who can’t sign in without first accessing their email…

    Thanks in advance.

Viewing 3 replies - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • Hey @pedrorafael,

    This is due to how Google scores users. It’s an algorithm that we aren’t privileged to, so I’m not able to tell you why they’re being scored how they are.

    Currently, there isn’t a way to specify what user roles are required to pass the CAPTCHA, but I can definitely file a feature request for this.

    With that said, you can adjust your CAPTCHA scoring threshold in your CAPTCHA settings with the reCAPTCHA human/bot threshold score feature. You can find this in Wordfence > Login Security > Settings. There’s more information about this in the article below.

    https://www.wordfence.com/help/login-security/#captcha-options

    Please let me know if this helps.

    Thanks,

    Gerroald

    Thread Starter pedrorafael

    (@pedrorafael)

    Hi @wfgerald,

    thanks for listening!

    I thought this idea of ​​receiving a login confirmation email for users was wonderful, but…

    In my case, one of the problems is that my clients are Woocommerce users who log in by default for example: http://www.store.com/my-account -> It would be very strange for customers to access your email and get redirected to a login page as an example: http://www.store.com/wp-login.php to be able to access your account -> From there generates another problem, users with Woocommerce “customer” privileges when they have a successful login, The user(customer privileges) receives an access denied error in the example: http://www.store.com/wp-admin. Users with subscriber, contributor, author, editor, and administrator privileges do not experience this problem as they are native to the system and access the example well: http://www.store.com/wp-admin.

    The cool thing would be the ability to choose user privileges to enable reCaptcha just like in 2FA (which is soooo good).

    At the moment I will disable this feature of reCaptcha, because customers give up buying when they see security obstacles, it’s a shame to have to do this…

    Thanks,

    Pedro.

    Hey @pedrorafael,

    I just wanted to let you know that a colleague of mine opened a feature request for enforcing CAPTCHA per user role.

    Please let us know if anything else comes up.

    Thanks,

    Gerroald

Viewing 3 replies - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
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