Elementor Pro | WordPress Websites Builder [Premium]

Elementor Pro | WordPress Websites Builder [Premium] v3.28.3 Nulled

No permission to download

softsasa

New member
May 24, 2022
10
2
3
hello first of all. Because of the elementor pro plugin that I downloaded from here, the site started to be attacked constantly. It creates php files with different extensions in the server and deletes the index.php file and closes the site. May I ask why the shell file is loaded in it? I'm having problems with 50 sites on the server because of the file I downloaded from here. this is a serious problem. How do you say you know? I wrote the theme myself. I only needed elementor pro plugin, I installed it from outside, other than that, all the plugins I used were downloaded from the wordpress market.
 

Valentina

Member
Jun 21, 2019
97
67
18
www.tesla.com
hello first of all. Because of the elementor pro plugin that I downloaded from here, the site started to be attacked constantly. It creates php files with different extensions in the server and deletes the index.php file and closes the site. May I ask why the shell file is loaded in it? I'm having problems with 50 sites on the server because of the file I downloaded from here. this is a serious problem. How do you say you know? I wrote the theme myself. I only needed elementor pro plugin, I installed it from outside, other than that, all the plugins I used were downloaded from the wordpress market.
Are you talking about this version? Elementor Pro 3.10.2 Nulled :rolleyes:
 

DCDev

Active member
Apr 14, 2021
108
101
43
This is why you should test the plugin on a local machine.

Firstly - virus check it with https://www.virustotal.com/gui/home/upload. Its free

Secondly - never download it from a user that has shared it, unless they are a trusted uploader/moderator. Why is @Phan Duy Nam allowed to upload this @TassieNZ and @Tomz? Surely we remove user uploads and go down the direct request route? I wouldn't download from this user.

Thirdly - Use a peace of software called "WinMerge" or "Visual Studio Code" to compare untouched with nulled. Also check it against a previous version that was nulled and is clean as well as downloaded from a trusted user/moderator.

Finally - always test on a local/staging site that sits outside of your live environment. Use plugins like Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall - https://en-gb.wordpress.org/plugins/gotmls/ and do a scan to be 100% sure. Check your local against live to see any odd file changes - making sure your content/plugin list is identical (minus version controls).

UPDATE: Another tool to use that I swear by and find very useful for testing/backing up a live site is LocalWP - https://localwp.com. It might not be as fast as other local tools but its easier to use, and manage and is backed by a large following of users that are willing to help if you have any issues.

All the above is common sense when using legit/nulled plugins. You never know what an update can do to a site. I have learned to never update live due to plugins breaking a function or the site in general. TEST LOCALLY!!

I'm going to "ad" this to my footer signature. It cant be stressed enough ;).
 
Last edited:

ryoma00027

New member
Jul 19, 2022
19
8
3
This is why you should test the plugin on a local machine.

Firstly - virus check it with https://www.virustotal.com/gui/home/upload. Its free

Secondly - never download it from a user that has shared it, unless they are a trusted uploader/moderator. Why is @Phan Duy Nam allowed to upload this @TassieNZ and @Tomz? Surely we remove user uploads and go down the direct request route? I wouldn't download from this user.

Thirdly - Use a peace of software called "WinMerge" or "Visual Studio Code" to compare untouched with nulled. Also check it against a previous version that was nulled and is clean as well as downloaded from a trusted user/moderator.

Finally - always test on a local/staging site that sits outside of your live environment. Use plugins like Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall - https://en-gb.wordpress.org/plugins/gotmls/ and do a scan to be 100% sure. Check your local against live to see any odd file changes - making sure your content/plugin list is identical (minus version controls).

All the above is common sense when using legit/nulled plugins. You never know what an update can do to a site. I have learned to never update live due to plugins breaking a function or the site in general. TEST LOCALLY!!

I'm going to ad this to my footer signature. It cant be stressed enough ;).
yes, i agree to this statement
 

MrSam_1

Well-known member
Administrative
Trusted Seller
Dec 1, 2018
23,615
26,958
120
A daft question. Is this untouched as in a licenced copy that you have obtained through elementor themselves and shared? Have we a moderator/contributor that is trusted to help null this? Can @Tomz do this for us?
Yes untouched means it is coming straight from the developer and needs someone to null it.
 

Bossmanuk

Active member
Jan 30, 2021
133
121
43
I have nulled this from the untouched version of v 3.10.2. Please test. I have also scanned it with VirusTotal as well please view screenshot attached. :cool:
 

Attachments

  • VirusTotal-File-ba4952bc1ce5da62ba511306bc71868654084875fbb5696af9ca3c562592856a.png
    VirusTotal-File-ba4952bc1ce5da62ba511306bc71868654084875fbb5696af9ca3c562592856a.png
    135.9 KB · Views: 36
  • elementor-pro.zip
    2.9 MB · Views: 53

venurao

Active member
May 7, 2022
108
53
28
I think only staff members should be allowed to update this plugin
This is why you should test the plugin on a local machine.

Firstly - virus check it with https://www.virustotal.com/gui/home/upload. Its free

Secondly - never download it from a user that has shared it, unless they are a trusted uploader/moderator. Why is @Phan Duy Nam allowed to upload this @TassieNZ and @Tomz? Surely we remove user uploads and go down the direct request route? I wouldn't download from this user.

Thirdly - Use a peace of software called "WinMerge" or "Visual Studio Code" to compare untouched with nulled. Also check it against a previous version that was nulled and is clean as well as downloaded from a trusted user/moderator.

Finally - always test on a local/staging site that sits outside of your live environment. Use plugins like Anti-Malware Security and Brute-Force Firewall - https://en-gb.wordpress.org/plugins/gotmls/ and do a scan to be 100% sure. Check your local against live to see any odd file changes - making sure your content/plugin list is identical (minus version controls).

UPDATE: Another tool to use that I swear by and find very useful for testing/backing up a live site is LocalWP - https://localwp.com. It might not be as fast as other local tools but its easier to use, and manage and is backed by a large following of users that are willing to help if you have any issues.

All the above is common sense when using legit/nulled plugins. You never know what an update can do to a site. I have learned to never update live due to plugins breaking a function or the site in general. TEST LOCALLY!!

I'm going to ad this to my footer signature. It cant be stressed enough ;).
Agree. I think only staff members should be allowed to update this plugin.
 

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