Honeypot for Contact Form 7 adds honeypot non-intrusive anti-spam functionality to CF7 forms.
This simple addon module to the wonderful Contact Form 7 (CF7) plugin adds basic honeypot anti-spam functionality to thwart spambots without the need for an ugly captcha.
The principle of a honeypot is simple — bots are stupid. While some spam is hand-delivered, the vast majority is submitted by bots scripted in a specific (wide-scope) way to submit spam to the largest number of form types. In this way they somewhat blindly fill in fields, regardless of whether the field should be filled in or not. This is how a honeypot catches the bot — it introduces an additional field in the form that if filled out will trigger the honeypot and flag the submission as spam.
Additionally, as of version 2.1, the plugin also features an optional submission time check. This checks how long it takes to submit the form and if under a user-defined threshold, it rejects the submission as spam. This works under the idea (backed up by testing) that spam bots submit forms super fast (usually 1-2 seconds), whereas people take longer.
You will need Contact Form 7 version 3.0+ at a minimum. It is recommended to use version 5.3+ of CF7, for better spam logging. For the best results, we suggest always using the latest versions of WordPress and CF7.
We highly recommend Flamingo with CF7 and this plugin. Using Flamingo allows you to track spam submissions (via inbound messages / spam
tab in Flamingo), showing you what got caught in the honeypot and why. Be sure to check your Honeypot settings to turn storing the honeypot on for this.
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This plugin does not track users, store any user data, send user data to external servers, nor does it use cookies. This is an addon plugin, and requires Contact Form 7. Please review Contact Form 7’s privacy policies for more information.
If you’d like to translate this plugin, please visit the plugin’s translate.wordpress.org page. As of v1.10, all translation is handled there. Version 2.0 brings a bunch of new strings in need of translation, so a huge thank you to the polyglots that contribute!
The latest version of this plugin is designed to work with the latest version of Contact Form 7 and WordPress. If you are using older versions of either, you’re best to find the version of this plugin released around the same time as the version you’re using. You can access older versions of this plugin by clicking Advanced View on the right of the plugin’s page and scrolling to the bottom of the plugin’s page. Use at your own risk. We strongly recommend upgrading to the latest versions whenever possible.
While the basic settings should keep most people happy, we’ve added several filters for you to further customize the honeypot field. The three filters available are:
wpcf7_honeypot_accessibility_message
– Adjusts the default text for the (hidden) accessibility message (can now be done on the settings page).wpcf7_honeypot_container_css
– Adjusts the CSS that is applied to the honeypot container to keep it hidden from view.wpcf7_honeypot_html_output
– Adjusts the entire HTML output of the honeypot element.For examples of the above, please see this recipe Gist.
Probably not. But it should reduce it to a level whereby you don’t require any additional spam challenges (CAPTCHA, math questions, etc.).
This largely depends on the quality of the CAPTCHA. Unfortunately the more difficult a CAPTCHA is to break, the more unfriendly it is to the end user. This honeypot module was created because I don’t like CAPTCHAs cluttering up my forms. My recommendation is to try this module first, and if you find that it doesn’t stop enough spam, then employ more challenging anti-spam techniques.
You sure can, and many users have indicated this helps stop even more spam, as it increases your chances a bot will get caught in the trap. Just make sure each Honeypot field has a unique name.
Yep! See the Installation section for more details and this Gist for examples.
As of version 2.0, this shouldn’t be the case any longer. However, if it is for some reason, there is a simple work around. See here for details.
You bet! If the honeypot trap is triggered, an email isn’t sent, but the form submission is added to the spam section of Flamingo so you can review what tripped things up.
I realize not everyone loves ads, but daddy’s gotta pay the bills. I’m extremely grateful to the numerous users that have donated to the plugin’s development over the years, and while that’s awesome, I don’t think donations will ever come remotely close to covering the time and effort it takes to maintain and support a plugin that now has nearly 1.5 million downloads and more than 300,000 active installs.
Changed contributor to WPExperts
Fixes small bug when enabling in bulk with other plugins.
Added new feature: additional submission time check to improve bot-stopping power! Also, fixed small HTML issue and tidied up shortcode interface.
Improved backwards compatibility. Solves issues when plugin installed on older versions of CF7.
Better error checking for missing config problems.
General code cleanup, better adherence to WP coding standards and fixes for i18n functions.
Replaced text domain constant with plain string for better i18n compatability.
Hotfix for issue with options not being set on upgrade.
A significant update with a bunch of new things. Please see the release notes.
Minor update to change name to comply with CF7 copyright notice.
Added do-not-store for when forms are stored in the DB (i.e. Flamingo). Improved wrapper ID masking and customization.
Additional functionality to improve spam-stopping power.
Introduces ability to force W3C compliance. See here for details.
Addresses accessibility concerns regarding a missing label and disables autocomplete to prevent browser autocomplete functions from filling in the field.
Updates for Function/Class changes related to CF7 4.6. Removed plugin local language support, instead use translate.wordpress.org.
Added i18n support, French language pack. Thx chris-kns
Added wpcf7_honeypot_accessibility_message and wpcf7_honeypot_container_css filters, i18n support.
Provides backwards compatibility for pre-CF7 4.2, introduces ability to remove accessibility message.
Quick fix release to fix PHP error introduced in 1.6.3.
Updates to accommodate changes to the CF7 editor user interface.
Small change to accommodate validation changes made in CF7 4.1.
Small change to accommodate changes made in CF7 3.9.
Quite a lot of code clean-up. This shouldn’t result in any changes to the regular output, but it’s worth checking your forms after updating. Also, you’ll note that you now have the ability to add a custom CLASS and ID attributes when generating the Honeypot shortcode (in the CF7 form editor).
Added filter hook for greater extensibility. See installation section for more details.
Update to make compatible with WordPress 3.8 and CF7 3.6. Solves problem of unrendered honeypot shortcode appearing on contact forms.
Update to improve outputted HTML for better standards compliance when the same form appears multiple times on the same page.
Small update to add better i18n and WPML compatibility.
Small update for W3C compliance. Thanks Jeff.