Back in 2012, I was excited about LiveFyre. It was a third-party commenting system that promised to revolutionize how blog readers interacted with content. I installed it, loved it, and wrote a glowing review. Fast forward to today, and LiveFyre no longer exists. It was acquired by Adobe in 2016, folded into the Adobe Experience Manager platform, and eventually discontinued as a standalone product.

The story of LiveFyre is a good reminder that the tools we use in online marketing come and go, but the underlying need they served remains constant: how do you build engagement and community on your content?

What LiveFyre Was

LiveFyre was a real-time commenting platform for websites. It replaced the default WordPress comment system with something more dynamic, featuring live-updating comments, social media login integration, and the ability for readers to share their comments directly to their social networks. The “cool factor” was significant at the time.

What I liked most about LiveFyre in 2012 was that comments remained in your WordPress database (unlike Facebook comments, which stayed on Facebook). It also had excellent social media integration and genuinely impressive customer support. I reported a minor bug and received a detailed response within three minutes, including CSS fixes for my theme that I had not even asked for.

LiveFyre competed with Disqus and IntenseDebate, two other third-party commenting platforms that were popular at the time.

What Happened to LiveFyre

Adobe acquired LiveFyre in 2016 for its social content aggregation and engagement features. The technology was absorbed into Adobe Experience Manager's “Livefyre Apps” suite, targeting enterprise customers. Over time, Adobe deprecated the standalone product, and it is no longer available for individual bloggers or small website owners.

Blog Commenting and Engagement in 2026

The blog commenting landscape looks very different today. Here are your current options:

  • Native WordPress Comments โ€” For most bloggers, the built-in WordPress commenting system is perfectly adequate, especially when paired with the Akismet anti-spam plugin. It is simple, reliable, and keeps your data entirely in your control.
  • Disqus โ€” Still the most popular third-party commenting system. Disqus adds social features and moderation tools, but comes with ads on the free plan and has been criticized for privacy concerns and page speed impact.
  • Community Platforms โ€” Many content creators have moved their community engagement off their blogs entirely and onto platforms like Circle, Discord, Slack communities, or private Facebook groups. This gives you more control over the conversation and builds a stronger sense of community.
  • Newsletter-Based Engagement โ€” Platforms like Substack, Beehiiv, and Kit (formerly ConvertKit) enable comments and discussions directly within email newsletters, shifting engagement from the blog to the inbox.

My Recommendation

For most bloggers, I recommend sticking with native WordPress comments and focusing your community-building efforts on email and a platform like Circle or a private community group. The era of third-party comment widgets adding significant value to a blog is largely over. What matters now is building genuine relationships with your audience, wherever they prefer to engage.

The lesson from LiveFyre's rise and fall: never build your engagement strategy entirely on a third-party tool you do not control. Own your audience, own your data, and use tools that keep you in the driver's seat.

TEST