WordPress 6.8 Cecil is out, and it’s a great release. It’s unbelievable that it’s already been downloaded over 6 million times as I write this. That feeling never gets old.
It’s a funny time in WordPress because there are a lot of really interesting open questions:
- Can we iterate faster with canonical plugins?
- What’s the fun thing we can put in to celebrate 7.0, and when will that be? (I was rooting for real-time co-editing like Notion/Canva/Google Docs.)
- How can we use AI to automate our manual work around WordPress.org?
- Can AI help us make 60k+ open source plugins and themes in the directory more secure? (I think so.)
- What should we do with our 13k issue backlog? (That’s a lot of bug gardening.)
- How will AI change how people build and update sites?
- Just like RSS and web standards supercharged WordPress for the podcasting and search revolutions, what standards or APIs can we ship to help 40%+ of the web work with AI agents? (Plus an entire rabbit hole of all the new sloppy crawlers using so many resources.)
Some of these broad changes are mixed. At one point, I used Google to search for things and would visit their top result, which is great for website owners. Nowadays, Google pulls almost everything I need into the results page, so I don’t see as many random sites. But on Perplexity, sometimes I’ll read the answer and then visit 4-5 of the sources it cites to learn more, so I’m visiting 4-5x more random websites, usually powered by WordPress, than I would have even in the early days of Google. We don’t know how this all plays out yet.
These questions are also against the backdrop of some of the brightest minds in WordPress spending more time with legal code than computer code, which could last until 2027 or longer with appeals.
Speaking for myself, I was in my first deposition today. I really appreciated the due process and decorum of the rule of law, and just like code, law has a million little quirks, global variables, loaded libraries, and esoteric terminology. But wow, after a full day of that, I’m mentally exhausted. Hence, I’m posting about 6.8 after it’s had 6 million downloads. I’m more impressed than ever by what smart lawyers do, and the entire thing, though sometimes imperfect and frustrating, is a blessing to our democracy. However, I can’t wait to return to spending the plurality of my days with engineers and designers again. I’m sure many other folks in the WordPress community would agree.
Super excited to see whats next with AI and WordPress!
Also looking fwd to see what v7 will bring to celebrate the milestone. My vote goes for a general cleaning in terms of code and functionalities from the blogging era to a fully cms.
AI-powered security enhancements would be a fantastic evolution for the platform. It would also be incredible to see the official Security White Paper updated in the future to reflect these advancements.
It will be interesting to see what AI can bring, even maybe suggesting fixes to code and then checked for QA before it goes live.
Even running through thousands of plugins to check they comply with modern standards – it’s a lot less manual work.
Real time co-editing sounds cool.
Wow, it’s amazing to see how far WordPress has come, with 6.8 already being such a success. The questions you raised about AI and the future of site-building are definitely intriguing, exciting times ahead.
It’s nice to think about what WordPress can do with each release. it is against the very existence of the web for google to finalize search results on its own. i have not made search queries for a long time except claude, perplexity and chatgpt. It’s nice to layer a different perspective on the subject, artificial intelligence is definitely the beginning of a new era as you said. WordPress is important for you to lead at a time like this. I hope WordPress and the community will come out of this process strong.
We’re 100% aligned that 7.0 should provide realtime co-editing and better inline commenting. We have writers today that will collab in Google Docs on an article and then just copy & paste the whole thing into WP Admin. So we’d love to see this come to WordPress!