Drop a file, get a short code, share it. The file streams straight from your browser to theirs over an encrypted WebRTC connection — no upload, no server, no account, nothing stored. Multi-GB files and whole folders work, and if the connection drops it can resume.
Hey Product Hunt 👋
Last week I was trying to send a 15GB file to a friend, and I sat there watching Google Drive slowly sync it up to a server… so it could then sync back down to him. Two big transfers and a wait, just to move a file between two people who were both online right then.
That made no sense to me, so I built jfsendit. You drop a file, you get a short code, you give the code to one person. The bytes go straight from your browser to theirs over an encrypted WebRTC connection — they never get uploaded to or stored on a server. Only a tiny code-exchange touches my side, just to introduce the two browsers to each other.
A few things I'm proud of:
- No accounts, no installs, works in Chrome/Edge/Firefox/Safari incl. mobile
- Multi-GB files and whole folders (streams across as one .zip) — that 15GB file now just goes
- End-to-end encrypted by default (WebRTC DTLS) — I literally can't see what you send
- Resumes from the exact byte if the connection drops
- Nothing stored, no tracking, codes are one-time and short-lived
- While you wait for your file to be transferred you can play snake, yes there is also a leaderboard
- If the sender and receiver are on the same LAN, it doesn't even touch the Internet
It's free and there's nothing to sign up for. Send something to a friend and tell me where it breaks — especially connection issues across different networks, since that's the hardest part of going server-less. Brutally honest feedback very welcome.
As a producer I'm forever trying to send multi-GB stem folders to collaborators, and the Drive/Dropbox round-trip is exactly the pain you described. Browser-to-browser WebRTC with folder-as-zip and resume-on-drop fits that use case perfectly — does it hold up over flaky coffee-shop wifi for a 10GB+ transfer, or is LAN where it really shines?
The STUN-only approach is actually pretty cool.
Most tools saying "peer-to-peer" end up relaying traffic through their own servers when things get complicated.
Have you seen many transfers fail because of NAT restrictions?
Congrats on the launch!
browser-to-browser is the right default — but the part nobody shows is transfers behind symmetric nat quietly falling back to a turn relay. that relay's the one bit of 'no server' that isn't.
This is clever. Does resume work if the receiver accidentally closes their tab mid-transfer?
Hey! 👋
Congrats on the launch! 🚀
I love the simplicity of the concept. So many ideas get stuck in planning mode, and a product that encourages people to stop overthinking and actually ship resonates with every founder and creator.
We're also launching Blazly Backlinker today, helping marketers automate backlink discovery, outreach, and guest posting from one workflow.
Would love to hear your thoughts if you get a chance to check us out as well. Best of luck with the launch today! 🎉
The name is hard to ignore 😄Are there any practical limits on file size or transfer speed, but this looks really useful. Congrats!
About just f***ing send it on Product Hunt
“Send any file, any size, straight from browser to browser”
just f***ing send it launched on Product Hunt on June 19th, 2026 and earned 154 upvotes and 15 comments, placing #8 on the daily leaderboard. Drop a file, get a short code, share it. The file streams straight from your browser to theirs over an encrypted WebRTC connection — no upload, no server, no account, nothing stored. Multi-GB files and whole folders work, and if the connection drops it can resume.
just f***ing send it was featured in Web App (122.5k followers) and Productivity (654.4k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 177k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted just f***ing send it?
just f***ing send it was hunted by Yiğitcan Kutay Güler. 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.
Want to see how just f***ing send it stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.