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Vialerto turns local reports into community intelligence for cities. People anonymously report issues like unsafe crossings, poor visibility, traffic hazards, and infrastructure problems. These reports are mapped and grouped to reveal real community priorities that are usually invisible in official data.
The idea started while I was traveling between Poland and Slovakia.
I kept noticing places where people felt unsafe — dangerous crossings, poor visibility, speeding traffic. What frustrated me most wasn't just the incidents themselves, but the fact that this information rarely existed anywhere in a structured way.
A dangerous location could be known by hundreds of local residents, yet officially it often wasn't visible until someone got hurt.
Originally, Vialerto was built as a simple community safety map.
But during conversations with local leaders, including a former mayor of a small village, I realized the problem was much bigger than road safety.
He told me that municipalities often have to make decisions with very limited data about what residents actually consider important. People discuss problems every day, but there is rarely a shared system showing how many people experience the same issue, where it happens, and how strongly the community cares about solving it.
That conversation changed the direction of the project.
Today, Vialerto is evolving into a community intelligence platform that helps residents identify, map and prioritize local issues — from dangerous crossings and missing sidewalks to poor lighting, damaged roads and other infrastructure problems.
The goal is simple:
Turn local observations into actionable community data.
Our long-term vision is to help communities better understand their own priorities and give municipalities access to real-world citizen feedback when making decisions.
We're still very early and actively learning from residents, community groups and local governments.
I'd love your feedback:
• Would you use something like this in your city? • What local problems would you report first? • If you work in local government, what data would be most useful to you?
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About Vialerto on Product Hunt
“Report local issues. Reveal community priorities.”
Vialerto was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 4 upvotes and 1 comments, placing #158 on the daily leaderboard. Vialerto turns local reports into community intelligence for cities. People anonymously report issues like unsafe crossings, poor visibility, traffic hazards, and infrastructure problems. These reports are mapped and grouped to reveal real community priorities that are usually invisible in official data.
Vialerto was featured in Maps (12.8k followers), Social Networking (1.7k followers), Community (3.1k followers) and Vercel Day (20 followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 9.9k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted Vialerto?
Vialerto was hunted by Dávid Kolísek. 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 Vialerto stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.
Hey Product Hunt 👋
I'm Dávid, the maker of Vialerto.
The idea started while I was traveling between Poland and Slovakia.
I kept noticing places where people felt unsafe — dangerous crossings, poor visibility, speeding traffic. What frustrated me most wasn't just the incidents themselves, but the fact that this information rarely existed anywhere in a structured way.
A dangerous location could be known by hundreds of local residents, yet officially it often wasn't visible until someone got hurt.
Originally, Vialerto was built as a simple community safety map.
But during conversations with local leaders, including a former mayor of a small village, I realized the problem was much bigger than road safety.
He told me that municipalities often have to make decisions with very limited data about what residents actually consider important. People discuss problems every day, but there is rarely a shared system showing how many people experience the same issue, where it happens, and how strongly the community cares about solving it.
That conversation changed the direction of the project.
Today, Vialerto is evolving into a community intelligence platform that helps residents identify, map and prioritize local issues — from dangerous crossings and missing sidewalks to poor lighting, damaged roads and other infrastructure problems.
The goal is simple:
Turn local observations into actionable community data.
Current MVP includes:
• Anonymous reporting
• Community issue mapping
• City-focused views
• Local issue categorization
• Admin moderation tools
• Anti-spam protection
• Municipality-ready dashboard foundations
Our long-term vision is to help communities better understand their own priorities and give municipalities access to real-world citizen feedback when making decisions.
We're still very early and actively learning from residents, community groups and local governments.
I'd love your feedback:
• Would you use something like this in your city?
• What local problems would you report first?
• If you work in local government, what data would be most useful to you?
Thanks for checking out Vialerto 🙏