Securely handling personal information on the web is a pretty big deal, and one of the ways you do that is making sure none of it’s sent via query string in a URL. Things like this are bad:

https://your-site.com?email=booger%40email.com

In fact, Google has some clear policies explicitly prohibiting certain information from being passed through a URL, including things like “email addresses, user logins, social security numbers, phone numbers or any piece of data that is deemed to be “PII”. And if you do send any of this information to Google, you’ll be penalized until the issue is resolved.

A Vulnerability in WooCommerce

Out of the box, the WordPress e-commerce plugin WooCommerce has a weak spot in this area. Password reset emails contain a link for a user to click to reset his/her password. That link, however, contains information that could be passed to a third party (like Google Analytics), posing a threat to users’ privacy, and penalizing you for enabling it.

That vulnerable information is a username. Or, as WordPress often handles it, a user login. I’ll be using “username” here because I like it more. For example: http://my-site.com/settings/account/lost-password/?key=NaEYetJTi6fI2HKaNfxT&login=bartjansen

To better protect private information like this, the solution is relatively straightforward: Instead of passing a username, use an ID. An ID will be unique to the WordPress instance, and make it much more difficult to use to identify an individual. And from what I’ve read, Google endorses this type of approach.

How Do I Fix This?

Long term, WooCommerce should change how it handles password reset emails, and I’ve already submitted a pull request to make that happen. But in the meantime, it’s relatively easy to fix it on your own site right with a few bits of code. Let’s dig into your theme…

Change How a Password Reset Link is Constructed

In each of the password reset email templates included within WooCommerce, we’ll want to use the available $user_login variable to get the user’s ID, and use that to construct a link that does not include a username.

To do this, you’ll want to copy each of these templates into a woocommerce directory inside your active theme. Keep the file structure in tact as you do. For example, woocommerce/templates/emails/plain/customer-reset-password.php will be placed in your-theme-woocommerce/emails/plain/customer-reset-password.php . Then, start editing.

woocommerce/templates/emails/plain/customer-reset-password.php

<?php if ( ! defined ( 'ABSPATH' ) ) { exit ; } $user_id = get_user_by ( 'login' , $user_login ) - > ID ; echo "= " . $email_heading . " =



" ; echo __ ( 'Someone requested that the password be reset for the following account:' , 'woocommerce' ) . "\r

\r

" ; echo esc_url ( network_home_url ( '/' ) ) . "\r

\r

" ; echo sprintf ( __ ( 'Username: %s' , 'woocommerce' ) , $user_login ) . "\r

\r

" ; echo __ ( 'If this was a mistake, just ignore this email and nothing will happen.' , 'woocommerce' ) . "\r

\r

" ; echo __ ( 'To reset your password, visit the following address:' , 'woocommerce' ) . "\r

\r

" ; echo esc_url ( add_query_arg ( array ( 'key' = > $reset_key , 'id' = > $user_id ) , wc_get_endpoint_url ( 'lost-password' , '' , wc_get_page_permalink ( 'myaccount' ) ) ) ) . "\r

" ; echo "

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=



" ; echo apply_filters ( 'woocommerce_email_footer_text' , get_option ( 'woocommerce_email_footer_text' ) ) ;

woocommerce/templates/emails/customer-reset-password.php

<?php if ( ! defined ( 'ABSPATH' ) ) { exit ; } $user_id = get_user_by ( 'login' , $user_login ) - > ID ; ?> <?php do_action ( 'woocommerce_email_header' , $email_heading , $email ) ; ?> < p > <?php _e ( 'Someone requested that the password be reset for the following account:' , 'woocommerce' ) ; ?> </ p > < p > <?php printf ( __ ( 'Username: %s' , 'woocommerce' ) , $user_login ) ; ?> </ p > < p > <?php _e ( 'If this was a mistake, just ignore this email and nothing will happen.' , 'woocommerce' ) ; ?> </ p > < p > <?php _e ( 'To reset your password, visit the following address:' , 'woocommerce' ) ; ?> </ p > < p > < a class = " link " href = " <?php echo esc_url ( add_query_arg ( array ( 'key' = > $reset_key , 'id' = > $user_id ) , wc_get_endpoint_url ( 'lost-password' , '' , wc_get_page_permalink ( 'myaccount' ) ) ) ) ; ?> " > <?php _e ( 'Click here to reset your password' , 'woocommerce' ) ; ?> </ a > </ p > < p > </ p > <?php do_action ( 'woocommerce_email_footer' , $email ) ; ?>

Process a User ID URL Variable Instead of Username

Next, we need to remove the action that requires a user login be passed in the URL, and replace it with one that accepts an id . We can then use that value to get the username, which will still be used when the user clicks the generated link. Do this inside your theme’s functions.php file.

functions.php

remove_action ( 'template_redirect' , 'WC_Form_Handler::redirect_reset_password_link' ) ; add_action ( 'template_redirect' , function ( ) { if ( is_account_page ( ) && ! empty ( $_GET [ 'key' ] ) && ! empty ( $_GET [ 'id' ] ) ) { $user_login = get_user_by ( 'id' , $_GET [ 'id' ] ) - > user_login ; $value = sprintf ( '%s:%s' , wp_unslash ( $user_login ) , wp_unslash ( $_GET [ 'key' ] ) ) ; WC_Shortcode_My_Account : : set_reset_password_cookie ( $value ) ; wp_safe_redirect ( add_query_arg ( 'show-reset-form' , 'true' , wc_lostpassword_url ( ) ) ) ; exit ; } } ) ;

Finished. Now, when users request to reset their passwords, the links they’re sent via email will contain no reference to a username. Instead, it’ll be something like this: http://my-site.com/settings/account/lost-password/?key=NaEYetJTi6fI2HKaNfxT&id=23423

Your customers are safer, and you’ll have less to worry about.