Ghost Changelog: Deeper Comment Threads, Likes/Dislikes, and Pinned Comments
Ghost Changelog (May 27, 2026) ships new tools for comment moderation and engagement. Key update: Ghost comment threads now support deeper nesting, so replies don’t stop at the second level. A focused view opens once a thread reaches a certain depth to keep the main comment section readable.
Second, Ghost comment sorting now includes a dislike button alongside likes. Default “best” sorting accounts for dislikes, lifting top-level comments with the highest net score, while replies remain chronological. Dislike actions are private to the reader who clicked them, while moderators can see full signals in the moderation dashboard.
Third, Ghost adds pinned comments. Moderators can pin a comment to the top of any thread either from the post’s comment section or from the comments dashboard in Ghost Admin. Ghost(Pro) users get access immediately; self-hosted users need an update to the latest version.
No cryptocurrencies or blockchain projects were mentioned. The update is software/product-focused and targets community discussion quality rather than market mechanics.
Neutral
This article is a Ghost CMS product changelog focused on community comment features (deeper threading, likes/dislikes, and pinned comments). There are no mentions of cryptocurrencies, tokens, exchanges, protocols, or blockchain-related metrics. Therefore, it has no direct linkage to crypto liquidity, protocol fundamentals, regulatory headlines, or token issuance.
From a trading perspective, the expected impact is neutral: users may spend slightly more time engaging with content, but that does not translate into measurable crypto market variables like volume, volatility, or on-chain activity. In past cases where non-crypto platforms improved engagement tooling (e.g., social/content moderation UX updates), markets typically showed no sustained reaction unless the update was tied to a crypto integration or funding/partnership announcement.
Short-term: no catalyst for price moves, and traders should not expect changes in order books or volatility bands. Long-term: also unlikely to matter for token markets unless Ghost adds explicit crypto-related integrations (wallet, payments, tokens, or token-gated communities) in the future.