PressForward is a free plugin that provides an editorial workflow for content aggregation and curation within the WordPress dashboard. It is designed for bloggers and editorial teams who wish to collect, discuss, and share content from a variety of sources on the open web.
PressForward helps you:
- Collect content from the web via a feed reader and a bookmarklet
- Discuss content through a collaborative editing interface
- Share content using best practices for attribution and citation
Collect
- Aggregate content using RSS/Atom feeds
- Capture any web content with a bookmarklet
- Import full text, image, video content, and post metadata
- Batch add feeds using OPML files
- Integrate standardized content with Readability
Discuss
- Discuss content internally with private commenting
- Count nominations from teams of contributors and editors
- Expose item metadata, including the name of the source and method of nomination
Share
- Allow contributors to send items directly to their own Twitter account
- Attach full content, attribution link, canonical URL, and metadata to WordPress Posts as Draft
- Republish any content type supported by your theme (text, image, quote, snippet, etc.)
- Optional auto-redirect back to original source
- Export an RSS feed that combines all content from site's feed list
Instructions for use are found in our
User Manual.
See how we compare to other WordPress plugins.
The PressForward Plugin has been developed and maintained by
Digital Scholar since 2019.
Boone B. Gorges is the lead developer. The plugin was originally developed by the
Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at
George Mason University as part of the
PressForward Project, generously funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Previous developers include
Aram Zucker-Scharff, and Jeremy Boggs. PressForward is free to use and modify under a
GNU GPL3 license.
Detailed information about our code can be found on our
GitHub Wiki.