API Radar turns leaked API keys into a searchable threat feed for your own org. This new version rebuilds the core engine so it continuously discovers exposed keys in public GitHub, then lets you slice them by provider, repo, file path, and time to see exactly what’s out and where. Instead of digging through noisy scanners or random alerts, you get a focused view of real leaked credentials you can revoke and rotate fast.
I’m building API Radar as a solo dev to answer one question: “Which of our API keys are already leaked in public?”
This launch ships a rebuilt engine that continuously pulls exposed keys from public GitHub and turns them into a searchable feed you can filter by provider, repo, file path, and time. The goal is to go from “some scanner says something is bad” to “here’s the exact key, in this file, in this repo – now revoke and rotate.”
I’d love brutal feedback from developers, DevOps/SRE, and security folks:
Would this slot into how you handle secrets right now?
What’s missing to make this something you’d rely on during incidents?
Happy to dive into technical details, detection logic, and roadmap in the comments.
That def would be helpful. It would also help to see if keys have already been rotated, most of the times if keys are leaked they're rotated since it's already in git history
About API Radar on Product Hunt
“See your leaked API keys before attackers do”
API Radar launched on Product Hunt on January 6th, 2026 and earned 80 upvotes and 5 comments, placing #24 on the daily leaderboard. API Radar turns leaked API keys into a searchable threat feed for your own org. This new version rebuilds the core engine so it continuously discovers exposed keys in public GitHub, then lets you slice them by provider, repo, file path, and time to see exactly what’s out and where. Instead of digging through noisy scanners or random alerts, you get a focused view of real leaked credentials you can revoke and rotate fast.
API Radar was featured in Privacy (11.1k followers), Developer Tools (511.9k followers) and Security (2.6k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 78k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted API Radar?
API Radar was hunted by Zaim Abbasi. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
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