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✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount

SleekView Feedback for Facebook Login

Facebook Login lets visitors sign in to WordPress with their Facebook account and links profiles to local users. SleekView Feedback turns those connections into a board so admins, support, and trust teams can upvote legitimate sessions and flag suspicious ones in public.

♾️ Lifetime License available

SleekView Feedback board for Facebook Login

From hidden FB links to a shared trust review

Facebook Login stores Facebook IDs and tokens linked to local users in wp_usermeta under keys like facebook_id and logs each login event in its own table or in WordPress options. The plugin works quietly in the background, but the team has no view into which accounts came in through Facebook, which links were created recently, and which look like they might be the result of stuffed or hijacked profiles after a known Facebook leak hit the news.

SleekView Feedback reads the Facebook ID meta and the login event log directly. Each connected account becomes one card with the user, the Facebook display name, the link date, the last login time, and the IP it came from. You map an upvote column for trust, a status column for labels like Active, Under review, Suspended, or Resolved, and a category column for tags like new_signup, existing_link, relinked, or suspicious.

The Facebook connection layer stops being invisible and becomes the board the trust and safety team actually reviews from.

Workflow

From FB links to a trust queue

1

Point at FB Login data

Connect SleekView to wp_usermeta filtered by the Facebook Login meta keys, plus the login event log. Add a WHERE clause to scope by date or signup type so the board shows the connections the team actually wants to review now.
2

Map vote, status, category

Pick the numeric meta key for upvotes, the status meta key for labels like Active, Under review, Suspended, or Resolved, and the meta key that carries the signup type. SleekView reads those fields on every page load.
3

Embed the review board

Drop the SleekView block on a trust and safety dashboard or a staff portal page. Reviewers see one card per connected account with the user, the FB display name, the link date, the last login, and the current status. Filters cover status and signup type.
4

Votes drive cleanup

Every upvote bumps the score on the source meta, which means scheduled cleanup or the next trust review can use the score to surface connections below a confidence threshold. Suspicious links get suspended and legitimate ones stay where they are.

Sample board

Sample FB Login trust board

A peek at how Facebook Login connections look on a SleekView Feedback board, mixing legitimate signups, relinked accounts after profile changes, and suspicious bursts from a known leak event.
274 votes
Burst of fifty new FB linked signups overnight from rotating IP range
Selen P. Suspicious Investigating
198 votes
Long term user relinked FB after a profile name change, harmless
@trustdesk Relinked Resolved
143 votes
Suspend FB connection on a confirmed bot account flagged by support
Vidar B. Suspicious Suspended
82 votes
New genuine signup through FB on the launch event landing page
@growthops New signup Active
47 votes
Weekly FB Login trust review board for staff finally shipped, thanks all
Halima E. Praise Shipped
12 votes
Old FB connection on a deactivated user, time to remove the linked meta
@cleanlinks Existing link New

Comparison

FB Login admin vs SleekView Feedback

FB Login default views

  • Connections live in usermeta only the admin actually queries directly
  • No way for support or trust teams to upvote the legit accounts in real time
  • Suspicious bursts get noticed only after a customer complaint reaches support
  • No shared queue to show trust staff which connections are open or resolved
  • Old FB links on deactivated users linger because no team review forces cleanup

SleekView Feedback

  • One card per FB linked user with display name, link date, last login, and score
  • Upvote writes back to a numeric meta key so trust reviews sort by confidence
  • Filter by signup type, status, or date using any meta key on the user row
  • Embed on a trust and safety dashboard or staff portal with a shortcode or block
  • Bridges the gap between hidden FB connections and the trust review the team needs

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for Facebook Login

Connections become tickets

Every FB Login link turns into a votable card. Trust staff see which connections the team trusts, which got suspended, and which still need a deeper look. The board behaves like a trust and safety queue on top of FB Login without bolting on a separate identity review tool.

Suspicious bursts surface fast

Tag a card with a Suspicious category and the board lights up the moment new bursts of FB linked signups land. The flag lives next to the connection, so the on call admin can pick up the ticket without digging through usermeta or guessing which signups matter today.

Cleanup follows the votes

Because votes write to the source meta, scheduled cleanup can use the score to surface FB links below a confidence threshold for review. The connection layer shrinks to the links the team agrees on and stops carrying ghosts from previous leaks or deactivated users forever.

Audience

How trust teams use the FB Login board

Shared trust review

Trust leads, support, and admins share one board for every FB linked user. Anyone can flag a connection, the team votes on whether it looks legit, and the queue stays sorted by signal instead of by who happens to scroll usermeta most recently this morning.

Support aligned cleanup

Support sees the FB connections behind tickets they receive. Trust staff vote on whether to suspend or keep the link, which keeps the conversation grounded in the source data instead of in long email threads about whether a given user is genuine.

Identity audit evidence

Each FB link carries a category, an owner, a status, and a vote history, which is the shape an identity audit wants when asking how the team handled Facebook connected accounts during a recent leak or trust event, which makes the next audit faster to defend.

The bigger picture

Why a review board changes FB Login operations

Facebook Login is one of those plugins that gets installed during a growth push, configured once, and then never reviewed. The team gets a quick conversion win and pays for it slowly over the following years. New signups come in linked to Facebook profiles nobody on the team actually sees.

After a known Facebook leak, bursts of stuffed signups land in the user table and nobody notices because the admin never opens usermeta. Long term users relink their FB account after a profile name change and support has no easy way to verify it. Deactivated users keep their FB connection forever because no team review forces cleanup.

A review board changes the shape of that work. Each FB linked user becomes a card the team can vote on, tag, and either keep, suspend, or resolve. Trust leads see suspicious bursts in real time.

Support sees the FB connection behind tickets they receive. Admins see the full history of links per user. Status pills give the queue a shape, categories let the team slice the catalog by signup type, and votes give an honest signal about which links the team trusts.

Because everything writes back to the source meta, scheduled cleanup and the next trust review start from a ranked list with notes, which keeps the conversation grounded in real signal.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Facebook Login

It reads what Facebook Login saves. The plugin keeps writing FB IDs and tokens into wp_usermeta and login events into its own log. SleekView mounts a board on top of that data, so the board renders directly from the live connection layer with no syncing job and no duplicate store.

 

Yes. SleekView supports logged in voting scoped per role, so a support agent can read the board and vote without ever reaching the FB Login admin. Senior trust leads keep full admin, junior support sees a curated view, and the same data source backs both surfaces without extra code on top.

 

Pagination and filtering happen server side, so the board only loads rows it needs to render the current page. SleekView uses any indexes on the timestamp, status, and signup type columns, which means it stays responsive even during bursts of FB linked signups across many user table rows during an incident.

 

Yes. SleekView accepts a WHERE clause when you wire up the data source, so you can scope the board by signup type, status, or date. Different pages can show different boards, which is how most trust teams build a focused review of suspicious connections next to the full FB link review on a separate page.

 

Status is a meta key on the user, so flipping it to Suspended updates that key on the live record. Most teams pair that with a small filter that respects the Suspended status when FB Login authenticates a session, so suspending on the board actually blocks the user from signing back in through Facebook.

 

Yes. SleekView lets you flip the same data source between anonymous and logged in modes on different pages. A staff intranet can show the full connection history and votes, while a public report can show only the count of connections per signup type without exposing individual user data.

 

Yes. Upvotes write back to the source meta key, which means any of your custom dashboards, scheduled cleanup jobs, or trust reports can sort FB linked users by score. The board is not a vanity counter, it is the input to whatever cleanup or reporting logic you run against the FB connection store.

 

The view paginates server side and only loads rows it needs to render the current page. SleekView uses any indexes on the vote, status, and timestamp meta keys, which means even very large FB connection histories stay responsive on the board without forcing the trust team to spin up a separate identity review tool.

 

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