#246- Monitoring Community Concerns, 2026 Global Partner Program, WP 6.9 RC1

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This week on The WP Week Newsletter, we cover the release of WordPress 6.9 RC1, Community Team monitoring the community concerns in Bangladesh, the future goals of the Core Program Team, the 2026 Global Partner Program, new projects, and more.

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🗣️TALK OF THE TOWN

The first Release Candidate (“RC1”) for WordPress 6.9 is ready for download and testing, and WordPress 6.9 is also ready to be translated.

The upcoming version will feature a new notes feature, fix a CSS specificity issue with the heading block’s background color, make improvements to the Interactivity API and Block Binding API, support defining border radius presets in theme.json, and will also introduce consistent cache keys for query groups. The frontend performance field guide and developer-focused changes list have also been published.

📰  WORDPRESS & AROUND

All the updates around WordPress and its closely related technologies

The team is monitoring reports about community dynamics in Bangladesh and coordinating with local organizers to support a healthy, welcoming environment. Contributors are encouraged to follow the community code of conduct, and any concerns should be submitted through official channels.

  • Tammie Lister outlines the Core Program team’s proposed focus for Q4: The Core Program team plans to focus primarily on improving WordPress roadmaps in Q4. This includes gathering existing roadmaps, analyzing how teams create and maintain them, suggesting a lightweight process for teams without one, and exploring a central place to display a combined roadmap. Additional collaboration areas include supporting WP Credits, Five-for-the-Future, WordCamp tooling, and improving recognition for non-development contributions.
  • Preparing the WordPress post editor for full iframe integration: WordPress 6.9 is set to introduce updates to prepare the post editor for full iframe integration in WordPress 7.0. Developers are warned when using legacy blocks (apiVersion 2 or lower) and encouraged to migrate to apiVersion 3, which is now required in block.json.
  • 2026 Training Team Representatives announced: The Training Team opened nominations for 2026, but most votes went to Rico F. Lüthi, who ultimately declined, and no other experienced contributors were able to commit, leading the current reps to continue their roles. Rade Jekić will serve as lead, with Sumit Singh and Muhibul Haque sharing responsibilities.
  • WordPress Community Team announces 2026 Global Partner Program: The program offers three pricing tiers, Global Leader ($180,000), Regional Powerhouse ($110,000), and Community Builder ($60,000) allowing organizations to support local WordPress events, Meetup licenses, and community initiatives while gaining global visibility, simplified administration, and flexible branding options. For last year, the program had a flat $160,000 annual fee.
  • WooCommerce 10.3.5: Dot Release now available: The release delivers critical bug fixes, including WordPress 6.9 compatibility improvements, hierarchical brand CSV import support, and refined asset loading control for block themes.
  • Remote code execution via malicious obfuscated malware in Imunify360 AV (AI-bolit): The flaw allows attackers to execute arbitrary PHP functions via the scanner’s deobfuscation logic, including through simple actions like posting a WordPress comment. Exploitation can lead to full website or server compromise, especially on shared hosting. The vulnerability has a 9.9 CVSS score, and Oliver Sild, CEO of Ptachstack, described it as “the biggest and most severe security vulnerability we’ve seen hitting the web hosting industry in the past decade.” The issue has now been patched.
  • Google Search Console adds custom annotations to reports: Google Search Console now lets you add custom annotations to performance charts, making it easier to track when changes or external events occurred.

👥 COMMUNITY NEWS

Updates and News from the WordPress Community

This strategic AI-readiness report helps enterprise leaders assess their organisation’s AI maturity, understand high-value use cases, and build a roadmap for adopting AI across people, processes, platforms, and data supported by real-world examples and practical guidance for marketing, digital, IT, and executive teams.

🚀 NEW PROJECTS
  • WP Stats: a simple and lightweight visit statistics system that records and displays the number of site visits without the need for plugins or heavy databases.
  • ArchiveWP: The plugin allows users to keep legacy content online for reference or record-keeping in a clearly designated, searchable archive.
  • DesignSetGo plugin: Developed by Justin Nealey, the plugin extends the native block editor with 43 blocks and 11 universal extensions, allowing users to build layouts, forms, interactive elements, and visual components.
  • Page Importer for WordPress: This tool by Breon Williams allows you to easily generate an XML file to import structured page hierarchies into your WordPress website.
  • FunnelWheel Country Based Pricing: Created by Kishore, the plugin allows users to apply country-specific pricing adjustments in WooCommerce using geolocation, billing address, or store base.
  • Introducing OneCaptcha: A modern WordPress CAPTCHA plugin that integrates Google reCAPTCHA, hCaptcha, and Cloudflare Turnstile with automatic detection and plug-and-play setup. It offers Smart Captcha rotation, broad compatibility with WordPress, WooCommerce, and major form plugins.
  • All new Sigmize: A new A/B testing platform for WordPress sites and other platforms such as Shopify, Wix, Webflow, and so on.
  • Create User Account from WooCommerce Guest Order: This is a micro plugin created by Marco Almeida that lets WooCommerce store owners easily convert guest buyers into registered customers.
  • WPFilters plugin: A new WordPress plugin designed to make it easier for visitors to find content. It lets site owners create customizable filters for categories, tags, custom fields, and WooCommerce attributes using checkboxes, dropdowns, keyword search, and more.
  • Simple Points and Rewards for WooCommerce: The plugin allows users to create a comprehensive loyalty program that lets customers earn points through purchases and referrals, then redeem them later.

🔖 INTERESTING READS & PODCASTS

More posts and podcasts from the WordPress Community you don’t want to miss

  • In conversation with Jonathan Bossenger: Jonathan Bossenger discusses his journey from teaching Brazilian jiu-jitsu to software development, his experiences growing up in post-apartheid South Africa, and his path into teaching and developer advocacy, along with his current work-life balance and future goals. From Seriously, Bud?
  • Gutenberg 22.0 and WordPress 6.9: Birgit Pauli-Haack and Ellen Bauer cover key updates in WordPress 6.9 and Gutenberg 22.0, and they also touch on upcoming WordCamp Asia and early plans for WordPress 7.0. From Gutenberg Changelog.
  • Roger Williams on how we might reimagine sponsoring WordPress contributions: Roger Williams of Kinsta discusses reimagining WordPress sponsorship, exploring how companies can fund contributors, balance business goals with open source values, and create sustainable, impactful sponsored contributions programs. From WP Tavern Jukebox.
  • More fun in WordPress: How Nick Hamze uses AI to build unusual WordPress blocks: Nick Hamze joins Nathan Wrigley to talk about his playful, unconventional journey in WordPress, from Automattic’s Happiness Engineer and chief swag officer to creator of quirky experiments and creative tools. From WP Builds.
  • Building secure & scalable membership sites: Robert Abela sits down with Andrew Lima, Developer and Technical Lead at Paid Memberships Pro, to explore the hidden challenges of building and maintaining large-scale membership platforms. From Melapress.
  • What is TTFB and why it matters for website speed and SEO: The WPBakery team tested how different WordPress page builders impact TTFB by measuring server response latency across identical minimal pages built with Gutenberg, Elementor, Beaver Builder, Divi, Bricks, and WPBakery. From WPBakery.
  • How to approach responsive web development in the modern era (2025+): Kevin Geary explains a modern, escalation-based approach to responsive web development, emphasizing intrinsic CSS techniques first, container queries second, and media queries only when the viewport is the true container.
  • Jeffrey Paul on what he wanted to ask Matt Mullenweg after missing his WordCamp Canada Town Hall talk: He responds to Matt Mullenweg’s WordCamp Canada talk and puts forth two key questions: how WordPress can help users “publish once, syndicate everywhere,” and how the platform can support trust and authenticity online as AI blurs the line between real and synthetic content.
  • Can e-commerce ever be simple?: Kurt von Ahnen and Toby Cryns discuss the evolving landscape of e-commerce, with a focus on the competition between WooCommerce and Shopify. They explore the importance of reducing complexity in e-commerce solutions, the impact of AI on SEO, and the future of agency development in a tech-driven world. From The WP Minute.
  • New block authoring architecture in Etch: Etch is shifting its Auto Block Authoring from core WordPress blocks to custom blocks, offering a more stable, flexible, and seamless editing experience. Custom blocks allow exact design representation, easier editing, improved stability, and the ability for developers to create and share blocks visually. From EtchWP.
  • Alfredo Navas recaps his year in the WordPress community: He reflects on a milestone year in the WordPress community, filled with travel, workshops, and speaking engagements across multiple countries.
  • A curated list of 12 AI-powered WordPress blocks made with Telex: Joe Fylan explores how Telex, Automattic’s free, browser-based AI tool that lets anyone create custom WordPress blocks using simple natural-language prompts. He highlights 12 creative examples, from games like Minesweeper to interactive effects, quizzes, recipes, weather widgets, and more. From WordPress.com
  • WordPress needs to catch up to the web: Joost de Valk argues that WordPress is falling behind the modern web, still relying on outdated, centralized systems like the WordPress.org plugin repository. He introduces FAIR, a decentralized and verifiable distribution model designed to improve security, resilience, and compliance with modern standards. While noting positive progress like WordPress Playground and the upcoming Abilities API, he concludes that WordPress must fully embrace modern, open-web standards. From Progress Planner.
  • The future of collaborative editing in WordPress VIP: Andrew Butler highlights WordPress VIP’s new real-time collaborative editing, which lets teams edit content simultaneously, leave in-line comments, and soon propose suggested edits all within WordPress. From WordPress VIP.
  • WP Engine moves to dismiss Automattic’s counterclaims, arguing they were filed too late: WP Engine’s latest motion argues Automattic and Matt Mullenweg waited too long to bring infringement and dilution claims, and asks the court to dismiss all seven counterclaims. From The Repository.
  • Inside FAIR’s approach to security: A new model for WordPress package safety: FAIR’s architecture is inspired by Bluesky’s distributed moderation, uses cryptographic DIDs for provenance, and is federating cautiously to balance security with decentralization. From The Repository.
  • Why people really choose WooCommerce: Katie Keith asked the WordPress community why people really choose WooCommerce and found the top reasons are flexibility, full control of data, low cost, a huge ecosystem of plugins, and the freedom that comes from open source. From Barn2 Plugins.

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Last but not least, updates from WP-CONTENT.CO 👇

Automattic, the company behind WordPress.com, has sent a legal notice to Kevin Geary, the creator of Automatic.css, over…

The WordPress Plugins Team, along with the Meta Team, has introduced a new feature for the Plugin Check…

The WordPress Community Team has issued a new call for developers to assist with enhancements to its event…

A conversation at LoopConf earlier this year has led to a new open-source security initiative called FAIR Software…

Team WP-CONTENT.CO

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