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Cosa, perché e come fare per i trackback e i pingback in WordPress

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Volete saperne di più su trackback e pingback in WordPress?

Recentemente, un utente ci ha chiesto informazioni su trackback e pingback in WordPress. Si tratta essenzialmente di modalità di comunicazione tra blog WordPress. Esistono fin dagli albori del blogging, ma pochi utenti conoscono queste funzioni.

In questo articolo spiegheremo i trackback e i pingback in WordPress. Parleremo delle loro differenze, di come funzionano e di come utilizzarli.

What, Why, and How to's of WordPress Pingbacks and Trackbacks

Utilizzate i collegamenti rapidi qui sotto per navigare tra i diversi argomenti di questo articolo:

Che cos’è un trackback?

Un trackback in WordPress è come un messaggio amichevole tra due siti web. Quando un sito cita o rimanda a un post di un altro sito, invia un trackback per informare l’altro sito. Ecco come funziona:

  1. Supponiamo che stiate scrivendo un post su WordPress. Nel vostro post, includete un link speciale chiamato URL di trackback a un altro post su un altro sito WordPress. È come un codice segreto che si trova nelle informazioni del post collegato.
  2. Quando si pubblica un post, il sito invia un trackback al link inserito. Questo trackback contiene informazioni sul post, come il titolo e un breve testo.
  3. L’altro sito WordPress riceve il trackback e controlla se si tratta di un link valido e pertinente. Si tratta di un controllo amichevole per vedere se il vostro post si adatta bene al loro.
  4. Se tutto è a posto, il trackback appare nella sezione dei commenti del post collegato. L’aspetto è un po’ diverso da quello dei normali commenti: di solito mostra il titolo del post e un frammento del suo contenuto.

Che cos’è un Pingback?

Un pingback in WordPress è un messaggio automatico che un sito invia a un altro quando si collega al suo contenuto. Ecco come funzionano i pingback in WordPress:

  1. Scrivete un post con un link a un altro post su un altro sito WordPress.
  2. Quando pubblicate un post, il vostro sito WordPress invia automaticamente un pingback al sito a cui vi siete collegati. Questo pingback include dettagli sul post, come il titolo e un po’ di testo.
  3. L’altro sito WordPress riceve il vostro pingback e controlla se il link è valido e ha senso. È un controllo amichevole per vedere se il vostro post si adatta bene al loro.
  4. Se tutto è a posto, il pingback viene visualizzato nella sezione commenti del post collegato come un link al vostro sito.

I pingback funzionano anche all’interno del vostro sito. Ciò significa che se si collega un articolo a uno dei propri articoli sullo stesso sito, WordPress invierà automaticamente un pingback a se stesso.

Si tratta del cosiddetto self-ping e, una volta che iniziate a bloggare regolarmente, potreste trovare i ping fastidiosi. Non preoccupatevi, possono essere facilmente disattivati, come vi mostreremo più avanti in questo articolo.

Qual è la differenza tra trackback e pingback?

Non c’è molta differenza tra pingback e trackback. Entrambi fanno la stessa cosa, ma con un approccio leggermente diverso.

La prima differenza è che i trackback sono manuali, mentre i pingback sono automatici, poiché utilizzano tecnologie di comunicazione diverse.

In secondo luogo, i pingback non inviano l’estratto del post, mentre i trackback sì.

Come inviare trackback e pingback in WordPress

Da WordPress 5.0, la possibilità di inviare manualmente un trackback ad altri blog è stata rimossa dalla schermata dell’editor dei blocchi. Non sono molti gli utenti che utilizzano questa funzione e WordPress ha già abilitato i pingback automatici per impostazione predefinita.

Tuttavia, se si utilizza l’editor classico, la funzionalità è ancora presente. Basta modificare un post nell’editor classico per trovare l’opzione di invio di trackback sotto l’area di modifica.

Send trackbacks in classic editor

Se non riuscite a trovare la casella di meta trackback nell’editor classico, fate clic sul pulsante “Opzioni schermo” nell’angolo in alto a destra dello schermo.

È necessario selezionare la casella accanto all’opzione “Invia trackback” e WordPress inizierà a mostrare una casella per l’invio di trackback sotto l’area di modifica.

Show send trackbacks box

Come moderare i pingback e i trackback in WordPress

Secondo la nostra esperienza, il 99% dei trackback e dei pingback sono spam. Questo è il modo più semplice per gli spammer di ottenere un backlink dal vostro sito.

Nel nostro caso, vediamo spesso pingback di scrapers di contenuti (ladri di contenuti) che copiano i nostri interi articoli parola per parola, compresi tutti i link.

Grazie a questi link, il loro software di blogging invia automaticamente dei pingback ai nostri articoli.

Le poche volte in cui abbiamo trovato utili i trackback/pingback sono state quando i blogger legittimi ci hanno linkato. Ci hanno aiutato a scoprire di essere stati pubblicati su Mashable e sul NYTimes.

In breve, abbiamo scoperto che il 99% di tutti i trackback/pingback sono spam. Questo è il motivo per cui li abbiamo disabilitati completamente. Non vale la pena di moderare una tonnellata di spam.

Esistono altri modi per scoprire chi si è collegato ai vostri articoli. Il più semplice è quello di utilizzare Google Analytics per scoprire chi si collega al vostro sito.

Detto questo, se si desidera comunque utilizzare trackback e pingback, è bene moderarli per evitare lo spam. Ciò che dovete fare è andare in Impostazioni “ Discussione nell’area di amministrazione di WordPress.

Quindi, nella sezione “Prima che appaia un commento”, selezionare la casella “Il commento deve essere approvato manualmente”. In questo modo, i trackback e i pingback non verranno visualizzati automaticamente e dovranno essere controllati per evitare lo spam.

Comment must be manually approved setting in WordPress

È quindi possibile accedere all’area di moderazione dei commenti di WordPress per controllare i pingback e i trackback in sospeso.

Da qui è possibile approvarli, eliminarli o contrassegnarli come spam.

Moderate pingbacks and trackbacks

Come disattivare i trackback, i pingback e i self-ping

Se siete stanchi di ricevere trackback e pingback di spam, c’è un modo per disabilitarli completamente.

Basta andare alla pagina Impostazioni ” Discussione e deselezionare l’opzione “Consenti notifiche di link da altri blog (pingback e trackback)”.

Disable incoming trackbacks and pingbacks in WordPress

Deselezionando questa casella si disabilitano solo i trackback e i pingback per i post futuri (non per quelli esistenti).

Per disabilitare i trackback sui post esistenti, dovete seguire il nostro tutorial su come disabilitare i trackback e i pingback sui post esistenti di WordPress.

Se siete stanchi che il vostro blog si auto-pinga, potete semplicemente installare e attivare il plugin No Self Pings. Per maggiori dettagli, consultate la nostra guida passo passo su come installare un plugin di WordPress.

Dopo l’attivazione, il plugin disabilita i self-ping sul vostro sito WordPress.

Speriamo che questo articolo vi abbia aiutato a conoscere i trackback e i pingback di WordPress. Vi consigliamo anche di consultare il nostro elenco dei plugin WordPress indispensabili e la nostra guida su come scrivere un post sul blog.

Se questo articolo vi è piaciuto, iscrivetevi al nostro canale YouTube per le esercitazioni video su WordPress. Potete trovarci anche su Twitter e Facebook.

Divulgazione: I nostri contenuti sono sostenuti dai lettori. Ciò significa che se cliccate su alcuni dei nostri link, potremmo guadagnare una commissione. Vedi come WPBeginner è finanziato , perché è importante e come puoi sostenerci. Ecco il nostro processo editoriale .

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Editorial Staff at WPBeginner is a team of WordPress experts led by Syed Balkhi with over 16 years of experience in WordPress, Web Hosting, eCommerce, SEO, and Marketing. Started in 2009, WPBeginner is now the largest free WordPress resource site in the industry and is often referred to as the Wikipedia for WordPress.

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Reader Interactions

127 commentiLascia una risposta

  1. Syed Balkhi says

    Hey WPBeginner readers,
    Did you know you can win exciting prizes by commenting on WPBeginner?
    Every month, our top blog commenters will win HUGE rewards, including premium WordPress plugin licenses and cash prizes.
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  2. Iftekhar Bhuiyan says

    Helpful post indeed. Thank you.
    On a personal level though, I stopped using it for quite some time now.

  3. Marcia says

    I’m curious is it weird to approve self-pings? Internal linking is still a good thing but would there be any cons//would it just look weird? Thanks!

    • WPBeginner Support says

      It’s a bit of a personal preference question. It adds more admin tasks for you to do with the links to approve and you already have an internal link to cause the pingback so most do not find value in allowing self pings.

      Admin

  4. Christopher Wilson says

    I am so glad I discovered this website because it make everything so crystal clear especially if you are a beginner (I guess that’s why it’s named appropiately). I love it.

  5. Mithu A Quayium says

    What about the real blogger who don’t spam. Don’t you accept their trackback/pingback then , even though they are legit ?

  6. LaShaun W says

    Are there any advantages to approving a trackback. I just got one and I don’t know if I should or shouldn’t approve it. If someone clicks it, I risk losing a visitor, don’t I?

  7. Philip says

    Thank you for explaining TrackBacks.

    I got two but the commenters name etc looked false and immediately raized the alarm.

    So, if they do copy your article word for word, no one should panick, because Google will not give that copied post good ranking and they will hurt their website rankings! Or, am I missing something more important here?

    I will disable trackbacks.

    Thanks.

  8. Sherry says

    Thank you so much for Tweeting this article! I just last week received 6 Pingbacks and had no idea what to do about them.
    I had just moved from Blogger to WordPress.org earlier this year and I have been learning the platform and had never heard of Trackbacks and Pingbacks until last week.
    I watched Your talk with Micheal Hyatt and learned so much too. I’m so glad I subscribed to Platform University and heard about your site it has been so helpful. I’m implementing a lot of the things you talked about with Micheal Hyatt.
    Sherry

  9. Sinea says

    Thanks for the explanation. I would instantly stop all trackbacks and pingbacks if I were more experienced. I’ve been blogging for 7 years but only just moved from Blogger to WP. THANK GOODNESS FOR YOUR WEBSITE. Without it, I do not know what I would do!

    I host two blog hops. I love meaningful comments from my guests at the parties as well as on other posts. Will disabling trackbacks or pingbacks interfere with my parties or real commentary? If it won’t, I’m disabling immediately. Another question… on existing spammy comments, is it better to mark them as spam or send them to the trash?

    • WPBeginner Support says

      Hi Sinea,

      Thank you for kind words, we are glad that you find WPBeginner helpful. To answer your questions:

      1. No, disabling pingbacks and trackbacks will not affect comments on your website.
      2. It is better to mark spam comments as spam.

      Admin

  10. Janine says

    Thank you for addressing this! Honestly its a confusing topic. I recently had my post pinged back upon. (How on earth would one say that!?!)

    I noticed that when she pinged me her post (in wordpress) automatically used my featured image for the post I had written.

    I have pinged a different blogs post (not a wordpress blog) today and I don’t see if there is a way to include the image.

    Is it still pinging if it is not a wordpress blog? Could that be what is different?

    Thanks!

  11. Tapiwa Zvakavapano says

    Greetings

    I see there is an unanswered question in all this; If I do not approve a Pingback, will the link still work. I am afraid I am not as fawning as all the other people above. I run a recently launched blog; Network Bees and I have lots of links to your pages. All of them are genuine, ie, I read your articles and link to relevant, well written materials.

    It worries me therefore, that all that effort is for nought because you are labeling all my links as spam. I may be confused about the whole thing, however. I think one of the comments above asked the same issue. Does disabling pingbacks and trackbacks mean that people cant link to a page? Or do the links still work nevertheless?

    One of the things that I have discovered is that established bloggers tend to be a bit “detached” when it comes to interacting with new bloggers. There is this blog that allows guest posts but does not allow even a single link to the author’s blog! I mean, what would be the point? In any case, that’s a digression. My question is above….

    • WPBeginner Support says

      Hi Tapiwa,

      When you link to another WordPress powered website, the link on your website will work just fine. If the site you are linking to has the pingbacks and trackbacks disabled, then they will not see the link in their moderation queue and will not be able to mark it as spam. You should keep working on your blog as you normally would.

      Admin

  12. Michelle Belanger says

    Thanks for this article and your site!

    I got a rather generic comment with a link to a site in the UK that had content unrelated to my blog post (a garden photo post linked to a job seeking website). i approved the comment initially because I want people to read and respond to my posts. After reading this article, I went in and removed the links and left the comment by itself.

    Is this method ever used as a way to break into someone’s site to hack it? Or is it just a way to get someone from another site to click their link and go to their site? Thanks again for your help with this subject.

  13. Liz Ziser says

    Great post! Thank you for sharing. :)

    Personally, my confusion lies with moderation options. For example, if a legitimate blog links to my site, and I move it to “Trash”, is the link deactivated? i.e. It’s fine for them to link to me, but I don’t want the pingbacks displaying at the bottom of my post… so would this be the best selection?

    I’d just like to better understand the consequence of each moderation selection: Approve, Unapprove, Trash, Spam, and Trash. What actually happens when each of these are selected.

    Thanks a lot!!

  14. Daren says

    Perfect! Been wondering about this for a while. Thanks for the focused “Don’t waster your time” advice.

  15. Sanjay Kumarr says

    Now I have good knowledge of Trackbacks and PingBacks, trackbacks are mannual with contents and pingbacks are automated / software based both will 99% spam.

    Your article is very good and clearly belongs to questions that I was trying to find.

    Good websites and information as well.

  16. Amit says

    This is very useful information for me too. Actually i was very confused before this. When i research on my website, that one trackback post show there.

    After read this knowledgeable article about trackback and pingback . my problem has been solve.

  17. Phil Owens says

    Hi,

    Considering your title is what, how, why, you haven’t explained how to create a trackback. I am a complete noobie to blogging, so treat me like an idiot :)

  18. Brendan Hall says

    I was going to use track backs on our site. We tried them for a while and we were just inundated with spamming comment (of which this comment is not lol). In the end I decided that is was not worth using track back at all.

  19. Luke Ward says

    Hi, If I disable pingbacks/trackbacks as you’ve suggested, will that also stop internal pinkbacks?

    Thanks

    • Heike Martin says

      Internal pingbacks can be avoided by making sure that the url used only shows the extension of the full url. Look at the url for this post. To avoid self-pings you want the link to only read “/beginners-guide/what-why-and-how-tos-of-trackbacks-and-pingbacks-in-wordpress/”. This info is from the make.wordpress site. To do this add the link and check in text editor mode and delete the domain portion of the url

  20. Robert says

    Thanks for this article on trackbacks and pingbacks. I had been thinking of the advantages of allowing trackbacks from genuine bloggers but if your experience is that 99% comes from spam then I don’t think the 1% is worth it.

    I think I will place a prominent notice advising bloggers to use the Contact Me form to request a link up.

  21. James says

    Have been reading the release notes on 4.0.1, specifically the XSS vulnerability in comments which launches upon moderating comments.

    I don’t suppose any one would know if the trace ping backs could be exploited in the same way.

  22. Jude Quin says

    I’ve been struggling with trying to understand this for years. I read the explanations over and over but it’s like a “Whos’ on first?” dialog!
    So, if my post includes a link to another article on the web, that site gets the “pingback” notice? then, if they approve it, it appears as a comment under the article that I linked to? and that comment consists of a link to my article?
    the track back is REALLY CONFUSING, the explanation appears to suggest that If I comment on an article on another blog, the track back links that post, with my comment, to one of my posts as a comment with title and excerpt from the other post..? whew! ..if this is correct, how is the track back sent? and how does it know which article I want my comment to link to?

  23. Allen Underwood says

    It’s a little ironic – you must have gotten tired of the WordPress SPAM as well now that you’ve got Disqus! :-) I had installed Disqus on our site CodingBlocks.NET but we were still getting a TON of SPAM which I mistakenly thought was comment SPAM. Turns out it was trackbacks – I was grepping the log files on the server and saw a large number of these trackbacks which led me to your site (in search of an answer). It’s unfortunate that I have to disable this feature because of all the dishonest people out there – one of the fake trackback’s I received was from a DENTIST!! I mean seriously…anyways, thanks for the explanation of trackbacks, pingbacks and how to disable if necessary (which I believe is probably incredibly necessary nowadays).

  24. Allison says

    Is there a way to remove a trackback on another person’s site or do they have to do it? There is a link to my site on another site and I want it deleted.

    Apologies if this posted twice. I refreshed and think it disappeared.

  25. Allison says

    Is there a way to remove a trackback on a site you do not maintain? There is a link to my site on a third party site that I do not want there. Is there a way for me to make it go away or do I need to ask the site it’s on to remove it?

  26. PixieHouse says

    I wonder – If I deactivate track/pingbacks at my site, yes even use a plugin to prevent such, do I still ping other blogs and eventually get a backlink every now and then?

    Or does the deactivation goes both ways?

    • Allen Underwood says

      On that same settings page (Settings -> Discussion) where you can deactivate the trackbacks and pingbacks, there’s another option just above that (in WP 3.9.1) called “Attempt to notify any blogs linked to from this article”. If you leave that checked then your blog will still attempt to send out pingbacks.

  27. Clive Maloney says

    That was really helpful. Thanks. I’ve had a lot of spammy trackbacks and pingbacks but a recent legitimate trackback got me wondering.

  28. Joy says

    If i allow a pingback that is legitimate just to see how it will look on a site, can i change y mind and delete it later?

  29. SPFischer says

    JIRCAS posted a good question but it was never answered. I’m finding that a number of bloggers will post huge lists of links to “other great posts on _____.” The blank, in my case, is to posts made in response to a weekly photo challenge. I will receive a pingback and while their post will be relevant to the challenge, I really see no value in allowing the pingback. Am I correct in this assumption? While I have a number of these being held for moderation, on the various posts in question, the link to my post still appears. If I don’t approve it, does this just mean that the link won’t work or that the link will work, but the pingback won’t appear as a comment on my post? So it turns into a one-way referrer to my post but I’m not reciprocating?

    • WPBeginner Support says

      SPFischer, Does the post linking to your post is really relevant to your blog? You see there are lots of people who run auto-blogging software and RSS aggregators. You don’t need to accept those trackbacks at all. However, blogging is very much like a discussion. You write something thought provoking on your blog and some other blogger builds their original content on your thoughts thats how the discussion moves forward in the blogsphere. So if you want, you can approve those trackbacks. However, we have noticed that the number of genuine trackbacks and pingbacks almost completely disappeared recently.

      Admin

  30. yvonnew says

    Loved the post. Found “How to Disable Trackbacks, Pingbacks, and Self Pings” very useful thank you.

  31. Sam Hembury says

    Thanks for this, really helped.
    Having already put a good captcha in place I wondered why I was still getting loads of spam on my sites. Will be disabling on all.
    Quick question; what do you use to tackle comment spam? I’ve been using google captcha as seen on

  32. Ron M. says

    Thank you for this. I’m a new blogger and was confused on what they really do. Thanks for the clarification. I kind of had an idea but didn’t know the difference between pingbacks and trackbacks.

    May I ask, whether it is good to allow them or to block them?

    • WPBeginner Support says

      If you are getting too many spam in trackbacks and pingbacks then block them. If you are getting some legitimate trackbacks from blogs and other sites in your niche then you should keep it.

      Admin

  33. Peter says

    I have a question if someone can answer for me please…

    I unchecked Allow Link notifications from other blogs, and I also disabled trackbacks and pingbacks on existing wordpress posts…

    …but do I still need to use the plugin called “No Self Pings” if I want to stop self-pinging myself? Or will the 2 actions I performed above ensure that I won;t be self-pinged?

    In Many Thanks,
    Peter

  34. Sven says

    Simple beginner question. ;-) And no, its not for any kind of spam reason. Is there any way to send trackbacks from wordpress “pages”? Posts have that feature but i need a soluton for pages.

    Regards Sven

  35. Billy P says

    Great article. I unchecked the allow link notification but still seem to be receiving a lot of spammy trackbacks. Are there any plugins you can recommend? We run a lacrosse pinnies site:

    My other question is how do we go about gaining “legit” trackbacks/pingbacks for our site. Thanks for your time. BP

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