![]() WishList Member will remove it from that view. So what this will do is if a member does not have access, say to a particular post, and they are viewing, say a category listing with that post in it, if this is turned on, they will not see that post in the category listing or the homepage listing or a tag listing or any other listing like that. Only show content for each membership level. And so, then it could work against you in terms of you forgetting to turn it off when you create a public facing post. ![]() Probably the only time you wouldn’t do this is if you are integrating your membership site with an existing blog on the exact same WordPress install, because in that case, you’re going to have a lot of public facing content. So you can choose whether to do that or not. So, if you’re building a membership site where the only content that’s going to be in there is membership content, then what this will do is whenever you create a new page or a new post, it will automatically turn the protection on, so that just in case you forget, or you’re in the middle of building, it’ll automatically turn that on. So, automatically protect new pages and posts. Next, we can set what’s called default content protection. Probably not going to select any of these unless you live in a country where you need to do the terms and conditions. So again, these are maybe a little bit less common as well for standard membership sites.
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