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Introduction to Emote

Modified on: Tue, 16 Apr, 2024

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What is Emote?
Logging in to Emote
Settings Overview
Advanced Settings

What is Emote?


Emote is a lightweight, easy-to-use commenting system that appears as a widget on your site. It is available for free both through your Ezoic dashboard under Settings > Content > Emote, or directly from emote.com.

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It can integrate easily with WordPress sites, but can also be used on sites built on other frameworks.

Emote is enabled by default for all Ezoic users who are also using Humix, as it provides the comments section for all Humix videos.

Logging In to Emote



You can log in to Emote via Google, or you can create an account at emote.com.

Moderators for a site can be assigned to a domain by the site owner. Please note that moderators must have an Emote account.

Moderators can perform a variety of functions related to managing comments, such as approving or disapproving filtered comments, deleting comments, or banning users.

You can access all of Emote’s features from the Ezoic dashboard or directly through the Emote dashboard at i.emote.com. For ease of use, we would recommend utilizing Emote’s features through the Ezoic dashboard for the most seamless experience.

Settings Overview

General Settings



Authentication Options:
You can choose to allow anonymous comments or not. If anonymous comments are disabled, commenters must log in using a Google account or Emote account in order to leave a comment.

Default Comment Sorting:
You can choose to have the most upvoted comments show at the top of the comments section, or you can choose to have the newest or oldest comments show first in chronological order.

Replace WordPress Comments:
This option is only available via the Ezoic dashboard. If you were previously using a WordPress commenting plugin, enabling this will automatically bring those comments into Emote. However, this may not work for all sites, because of the wide variety of plugins and comment templates available. If you enable this setting but don’t see WordPress comments in Emote, you may need to import the comments using the Import Comments tool in Advanced Settings.

Moderation Settings



Comment Filtering:
A range of options are available for you to toggle on or off according to your preference. There are options for filtering comments that have been detected as spam automatically, requiring manual approval for all comments, requiring manual approval for anonymous comments, and flagging comments that contain links or that are considered “hostile” using a preselected set of filtered/”hostile” words and phrases.

Add Filtered Term:
You can indicate any specific terms to filter automatically, so any comment containing this term will be flagged for moderation. Please note that only the exact phrase/word indicated will be flagged. For example, if you set the phrase “I love chocolate” to be filtered, a comment containing the word “chocolate” will not be filtered. Only a comment with the exact phrase “I love chocolate” would be filtered.

Add Moderator:
You can designate moderators for your domain here. You will need to use the email address used to create the Emote account for the moderator.

Widget Settings



These settings allow for the customization of the function and appearance of the Emote comment widget on the page.

Auto Load:
When enabled, comments will automatically appear in the designated area. If it is disabled, instead there will be a “Load Comments” button.

Disable Refresh/Disable Websockets:
Leaving these disabled will have comments appear in real-time. Enabling these will require a page to be refreshed for new comments to become visible.

Disable Fonts:
This will prevent custom fonts from being used within the Emote widget.

Hide Deleted:
If enabled, any comments that are deleted will be completely removed from the Emote widget, including any replies to that comment. If it is left disabled, deleted comments will only show “(deleted)” within the comment text, and any replies to that comment will still show.

Width and Height:
these determine the dimensions of the Emote widget box. By default, the box will fill the container it’s in, so this is generally not necessary. However, if there are issues with the layout being affected by the Emote widget such as the widget breaking out of the borders of your site layout, you can set an explicit height and width of the widget to prevent this from happening.

Nesting Depth:
This determines how many comments in a comment chain will be shown before further comments will be hidden under an “expand” button. This is set to three by default.

CSS Override:
This allows for further customization of the appearance of Emote. This requires a CSS stylesheet to be provided specifically for the Emote widget, so an understanding of CSS would be necessary for this advanced option.

Default Locale:
This determines which language the Emote widget prompts are in if someone is not logged into an Emote account with a default language set. Currently, only English, German, and Spanish are available, but more languages are coming soon.

Notification Settings


This determines what may trigger an email notification to all moderators. “Moderation” refers to actions that require a moderator’s approval, such as filtered comments. “Replies” shows email notifications when you receive a reply to one of your own comments.

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Moderate Comments


Here, you can review all comments left on the site. You can take moderation actions such as approving, deleting, or flagging comments.

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Manage Commenters


Here, you can view a list of all commenters that have ever interacted with your site. You can ban users, preventing them from being able to leave any further comments from that account, or you can “trust” users, which allows them to bypass all moderation flags. For example, if a “trusted” user uses a filtered word in a comment, their comment will still appear without sending an alert or requiring moderator approval.

Advanced Settings

Import WordPress Comments: If you have previous comments you’d like to still have on the page from WordPress, you can export those comments within WordPress, then upload the file here to have those comments show within Emote.

Import Disqus Comments:
This is the same as above, but specifically for comments left through Disqus.

Freeze Domain:
This setting completely locks all commenting across the full site, preventing new comments from being made. This is only recommended if you’re facing issues like spam/brigading and need to temporarily disable commenting, or if for any reason you don’t want any future comments left but would still like to have existing comments displayed, such as if the site was being retired.

Install:
This provides an HTML snippet so you can place the Emote widget on a specific location on the page if your site does not use WordPress. This is only necessary for non-WordPress sites.



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