That’s a really clear explanation of the issue 👍 Here’s a polished reply you could post:
You’ve highlighted a real pain point with the recovery flow. When an app is restored, the automatic switch to a new temporary URL — plus the renaming to recover-appname — definitely creates confusion. For WordPress sites especially, the stylesheet path breaking adds another layer of frustration and forces extra support requests.
A fix that keeps the original temp URL (or at least preserves it as an alias) after recovery would make the process much smoother. Even just showing clearer notifications about the name change and URL behavior during recovery could save users a lot of time.
That’s a really clear explanation of the issue 👍 Here’s a polished reply you could post:
You’ve highlighted a real pain point with the recovery flow. When an app is restored, the automatic switch to a new temporary URL — plus the renaming to recover-appname — definitely creates confusion. For WordPress sites especially, the stylesheet path breaking adds another layer of frustration and forces extra support requests.
A fix that keeps the original temp URL (or at least preserves it as an alias) after recovery would make the process much smoother. Even just showing clearer notifications about the name change and URL behavior during recovery could save users a lot of time.