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u/m m · 2 min ago

A threat actor has listed their customers' data, source code, databases, and keys up for sale.

A security incident has been identified that involved unauthorized access to certain internal Vercel systems. Customers Vercel credentials were compromised.

As per Vercel, the incident originated with a compromise of Context.ai, a third-party AI tool used by a Vercel employee. The attacker used that access to take over the employee's Vercel Google Workspace account, which enabled them to gain access to some Vercel environments and environment variables that were not marked as “sensitive.”

Source: Vercel

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u/Marcus-788 Marcus-788 · 4 hr ago

Why Developers Are Looking for a Postman Alternative in 2026

Postman has been the default API client for over a decade. But in the last couple of years, a growing number of engineering teams have been actively searching for a Postman alternative and for good reasons.

In 2023, Postman announced the end of the Scratch Pad (offline mode), forcing users to sign in and sync data to the cloud. For teams working on sensitive internal APIs or air-gapped environments, this was a dealbreaker. Compound that with mounting pricing concerns as teams scale, and the shift toward open source tooling, and you have a developer community actively exploring what comes next.

This guide covers the best Postman alternatives available in 2026 with a focus on open source, free, and CI/CD-ready tools so you can make an informed switch without disrupting your workflow.

What to Look for in a Postman Alternative

Before diving into specific tools, here are the criteria that matter most to developers evaluating a switch:

• Open source or source-available — so you can self-host, audit, and contribute

• Free tier that actually covers real usage (not just toy projects)

• CI/CD integration — native support for GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, Jenkins, etc.

• API contract testing and mocking out of the box

• No mandatory login / ability to run fully offline

• Git-friendly — tests and collections stored as code, not locked in a SaaS platform

• Active community and maintenance

Postman Alternatives at a Glance (2026 Comparison)

The table below compares the most popular Postman alternatives across the criteria developers care about most:

Tool

Open Source

Free Tier

CI/CD Ready

Standout Feature

Keploy

Yes

Yes (unlimited)

Yes

AI-powered test generation

Bruno

Yes

Yes

Limited

Git-friendly, offline-first

Hoppscotch

Yes

Yes

Limited

Lightweight, browser-based

Insomnia

Partial

Limited

Yes

GraphQL support

Apidog

No

Yes (limited)

Yes

All-in-one: design test mock

Postman

No

Yes (limited)

Yes

Largest ecosystem

The sections below explore each tool in detail, including setup, strengths, and what kind of team each is best suited for.

  1. Keploy — AI-Powered, Open Source Postman Alternative

Keploy is the most technically differentiated alternative on this list. While most tools replicate what Postman does (send requests, write assertions, organize collections), Keploy takes a fundamentally different approach: it records real API traffic and automatically generates tests and mocks from it.

This means instead of manually writing test cases for every endpoint, Keploy captures what your API actually does in integration or staging environments and turns that into a regression test suite complete with realistic mock data.

Keploy Feature Overview

Feature

Keploy Details

License

Apache 2.0 (fully open source)

Language support

Go, Node.js, Python, Java, and more via SDK

Test generation

AI-powered — records real traffic, generates test mocks

CI/CD integration

Native support for GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, Jenkins

API contract testing

Built-in; catches regressions automatically

API mocking

Auto-generated mocks from recorded traffic

Self-hosted

Yes — full on-premise support

Collaboration

Git-based — teams version-control tests like code

Community

Active Discord GitHub Issues

Why Developers Choose Keploy as a Postman Alternative

• Fully open source under Apache 2.0 no proprietary lock-in

• Eliminates manual test writing record traffic once, get tests automatically

• Built for CI/CD from day one integrates into your pipeline, not just your IDE

• Self-hosted deployment supported ideal for teams with data residency requirements

• API contract testing that catches breaking changes before they hit production

• Works with REST, gRPC, and more

Best For

Backend engineering teams who want to move fast without sacrificing test coverage. Particularly strong for microservices architectures where manually writing and maintaining API tests at scale is painful.

GitHub: github.com/keploy/keploy

Docs: keploy.io

  1. Bruno — Git-Friendly, Offline-First API Client

Bruno is the open source Postman alternative that has gained the most organic traction among developers since Postman removed offline mode. It stores collections directly in your filesystem using a plain-text markup language called Bru which means your API collections live in your Git repository alongside your code.

Why Developers Love Bruno

• Completely offline — no account, no cloud sync, no telemetry

• Collections stored as .bru files — version-controlled natively with Git

• Fast and lightweight — built with Electron but minimal in footprint

• Supports environments, variables, scripts, and assertions

• Actively maintained open source project with a large and growing community

Limitations

• No built-in API mocking

• CI/CD integration requires extra setup (no native test runner in pipelines)

• Collaboration features are limited compared to team-focused tools

Best For

Individual developers and small teams who want a no-nonsense, offline-first Postman replacement and are comfortable storing collections in Git.

GitHub: github.com/usebruno/bruno

  1. Hoppscotch — Lightweight Browser-Based API Testing

Hoppscotch (formerly Postwoman) is a browser-based, open source API client. It runs entirely in the browser, requires no installation, and supports REST, GraphQL, WebSocket, and SSE out of the box.

Key Strengths

• Zero install — open a browser, start testing immediately

• Supports REST, GraphQL, WebSocket, MQTT, Socket.IO, SSE

• Self-hostable via Docker in under five minutes

• Clean, minimal UI with dark mode

• Open source — MIT licensed

Limitations

• No AI-powered test generation or traffic recording

• Limited CI/CD-native integration

• Team collaboration features are on the paid cloud plan

Best For

Developers who need a fast, lightweight API client for quick testing especially useful when you want to test without installing a desktop app.

GitHub: github.com/hoppscotch/hoppscotch

  1. Insomnia — Feature-Rich API Client with GraphQL Support

Insomnia has been a popular Postman alternative for years, especially among developers working with GraphQL APIs. It supports REST, GraphQL, gRPC, and WebSocket, and has a clean interface that many developers prefer over Postman's increasingly bloated UI.

Note: In 2023, Kong (Insomnia's parent company) controversially removed local storage and required users to log in similar to Postman's Scratch Pad removal. The community forked the last offline version. If local storage is important to you, verify the current state before adopting.

Key Strengths

• Excellent GraphQL support with introspection and schema exploration

• Supports REST, gRPC, WebSocket, and GraphQL in one tool

• Plugin ecosystem for extensibility

• Clean, developer-friendly UI

Limitations

• Partial open source core is open, some features are cloud-only

• Mandatory login controversy (check current version)

• API mocking is not built in

Best For

Teams that work heavily with GraphQL or gRPC APIs and want a polished, feature-rich alternative to Postman.

  1. Apidog — All-in-One API Design, Testing, and Mocking

Apidog is a newer entrant that positions itself as an all-in-one API platform covering API design (with OpenAPI/Swagger), testing, mocking, and documentation in a single tool. It has gained significant traction, particularly in Asia, as a Postman replacement.

Key Strengths

• API design, testing, mocking, and documentation in one platform

• Built-in mock server no external tooling needed

• OpenAPI/Swagger import and export

• CI/CD integration via CLI

• Better free tier than Postman for teams

Limitations

• Not open source proprietary SaaS with a free tier

• Less community tooling and integrations compared to Postman

Best For

Teams wanting a full API lifecycle tool (design to test to docs) without the Postman price tag. A strong Apifox alternative as well.

Other Postman Alternatives Worth Knowing

Thunder Client (VS Code Extension)

Thunder Client is a REST API client built as a VS Code extension so if your team lives in VS Code, you never have to leave the editor to test APIs. It is lightweight, supports environment variables, and stores collections as JSON. Ideal for developers who want Postman-like functionality without opening another application.

RapidAPI Client

RapidAPI's client (formerly Paw on macOS) is a native desktop application for API testing. It has deep macOS integration and excellent GraphQL and REST support. A good choice for macOS-first teams.

curl httpie

For developers who prefer the terminal, curl remains the gold standard, and httpie provides a more human-friendly CLI interface for REST API testing. Both are free, fully open source, and trivially scriptable in CI pipelines no GUI required.

REST Client (VS Code Extension)

REST Client is a VS Code extension that lets you write HTTP requests directly in .http or .rest files, which can be committed to Git and shared across teams. Minimal overhead, great for lightweight API testing alongside your code.

Keploy vs Postman: A Technical Deep Dive

For teams considering Keploy as their primary Postman alternative, here is a more detailed breakdown of how the two tools differ at a technical level.

How Postman Works

Postman is fundamentally a manual API client. You define requests, write test scripts in JavaScript, organize them into collections, and run them via the Collection Runner or Newman (Postman's CLI). Tests are assertions you write by hand checking status codes, response body values, headers, and so on.

This works well for early-stage API exploration and one-off debugging. But at scale hundreds of endpoints, multiple services, daily deployments maintaining a hand-written Postman collection becomes a significant engineering burden.

How Keploy Works

Keploy instruments your application at the network layer and records actual API interactions the full request-response cycle, including any downstream service calls. It then replays these recordings as automated tests, with the downstream dependencies mocked using the recorded data.

The result: you get a full regression test suite with realistic mocks, generated from production or staging traffic, with zero manual test authoring. When your API changes, Keploy surfaces exactly which previously-passing scenarios now break.

Key Differences

• Test creation: Manual in Postman; automatic in Keploy via traffic recording

• Mocking: Postman requires mock servers configured manually; Keploy generates mocks from real traffic

• CI/CD: Both support CI/CD, but Keploy is designed pipeline-first

• Open source: Keploy is fully open source; Postman is proprietary

• Self-hosted: Keploy supports full on-premise; Postman requires cloud for collaboration

• API contract testing: Native in Keploy; requires setup in Postman

How to Migrate from Postman to an Open Source Alternative

Switching API testing tools does not have to be painful. Here is a practical migration path for teams moving off Postman.

Step 1: Export Your Postman Collections

In Postman, export your collections as Collection v2.1 JSON files. Most Postman alternatives (Bruno, Hoppscotch, Apidog, Insomnia) can import these directly.

Step 2: Choose the Right Tool for Your Workflow

• If you want an offline, Git-native replacement: Bruno

• If you want a browser-based, zero-install client: Hoppscotch

• If you want AI-powered test generation CI/CD: Keploy

• If you want an all-in-one platform (design, mock, test, docs): Apidog

Step 3: Migrate Environment Variables

Environment variables in Postman (dev, staging, prod) map directly to environment files in Bruno (.env per environment), Hoppscotch (Environments tab), and Keploy (environment config in YAML). Export your Postman environments and re-import or recreate them.

Step 4: Integrate into CI/CD

For Keploy, add the Keploy CLI to your pipeline and run recorded tests on every PR. For Bruno, use the bruno CLI (bru run) in your pipeline. For Hoppscotch, use the hopp CLI. All support JUnit XML output for test reporting in GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, and Jenkins.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Postman open source?

No. Postman is a proprietary commercial product. Some companion tools (like Newman, the CLI runner) are open source, but the core Postman application is not. If open source is a requirement, consider Keploy, Bruno, or Hoppscotch.

What is the best free alternative to Postman in 2026?

For a direct drop-in replacement: Bruno (offline, open source, Git-native). For AI-powered testing with CI/CD integration: Keploy (fully open source, free). For browser-based quick testing: Hoppscotch (free and self-hostable).

What is the best Postman alternative for CI/CD pipelines?

Keploy is the strongest choice for CI/CD-first teams it generates tests automatically from traffic and integrates natively with GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, and Jenkins. Bruno's bru CLI also works well in pipelines if you prefer a collection-based workflow.

Can I use Postman alternatives for API contract testing?

Yes. Keploy has native API contract testing that automatically detects regressions when your API changes. Apidog and Insomnia also support contract testing to varying degrees.

Is there a Postman alternative without login?

Yes — Bruno is fully offline and requires no account. Hoppscotch can be self-hosted with no external account required. Keploy can also be deployed fully on-premise.

What is the best open source alternative to Postman for small teams?

Bruno for simple REST/GraphQL testing with Git-native collections. Keploy for teams that want automated test generation without the overhead of writing and maintaining tests manually.

Conclusion: Which Postman Alternative Should You Use?

The right Postman alternative depends on what frustrated you about Postman in the first place.

• Frustrated by mandatory cloud sync and no offline mode? Switch to Bruno.

• Frustrated by cost at scale? Start with Hoppscotch or Keploy — both free and open source.

• Frustrated by manual test maintenance? Keploy is the only tool on this list that eliminates hand-written tests entirely.

• Need a full API lifecycle platform? Apidog is the strongest all-in-one alternative.

For engineering teams prioritizing CI/CD integration, open source licensing, API contract testing, and automated regression coverage — Keploy represents the most technically advanced alternative to Postman in 2026.

Learn more and get started: https://keploy.io/blog/community/postman-alternative

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u/V_V V_V · 3 d ago

Hi desi founders,
I am associated with the health and wellness industry and I’m curious to know how to grow my social media platform? It’s been hard gaining followers on instagram and I want to find a way to monetize it. I do not want to use my face in reels and simple picture posts do not seem to work

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u/MattSink MattSink · 3 d ago

Your LinkedIn is rented. Your Twitter/X following can vanish overnight. But a personal website on GitHub? That's yours forever. 🔒

For founders, developers, and freelancers who want to control their narrative — GitHub Pages is still one of the best moves you can make in 2026. Free hosting, version control built in, and a credibility signal that no social profile can replicate.

Why Bother With a Personal Site? 🤔

Because opportunities go to people who are findable and clear — not just talented.

A well-built personal site works like a 24/7 sales rep:

💼 Attracts the right clients and employers

🛡️ Owned by you — no algorithm, no platform risk

⚡ Builds trust before a single conversation happens

📈 Compounds in value the longer you maintain it

Step 1: Get Clear on Your Goal 🎯

Before touching any code, answer one question: what should this site produce?

Consulting leads? Job offers? Collaborators? Press coverage?

Pick one primary objective. Everything — your copy, your project selection, your CTA — should serve that goal. Trying to do everything at once is how you end up with a site that converts nothing.

Step 2: Build the Right Structure 🏗️

Here's the page flow that actually works:

🙋 Hero — Don't write your job title. Write your value. Who you help what you build the outcome you create. You have 10 seconds. Use them well.

📂 Projects — 3 to 6 curated examples, each with a clear result. Not a GitHub repo dump — a showcase with context and outcomes.

✅ Trust signals — Relevant proof: writing, contributions, past clients, certifications. A few strong signals beat a long unfocused list.

📩 One CTA — Single dominant action. Tell visitors what happens after they click. Clarity here is the difference between a form submission and a bounce.

Step 3: Launch Fast, Improve Always 🔁

Don't wait for perfect. Ship a baseline version first. A live site you can iterate beats a polished site sitting in drafts.

Then:

✅ Test on mobile — more than half of professional browsing is on phones

✅ Lock in your custom domain

✅ Add basic tracking — project clicks and contact conversions are all you need to start

For a full step-by-step build guide and 30-day optimization plan, this is the resource worth bookmarking 👇

🔗 Build Your Personal Website on GitHub With Ease — Unicorn Platform

The Mistakes Killing Most Dev Portfolios ❌

No project context — repo links with no story force visitors to guess your value

Generic hero copy — "passionate developer seeking opportunities" is invisible

Too many CTAs — confusion kills conversion

Stale content — an outdated site signals an inactive professional

Treat It Like a Product 📦

The founders and freelancers who get the most from their personal sites treat them like a product, not a one-time project:

🗓️ Monthly: Refresh hero, update top projects

🔍 Quarterly: Reassess positioning — does it reflect where you are now?

Small consistent updates beat one big yearly redesign every time.

The Bottom Line 💡

GitHub gives you ownership and credibility from day one. Clear positioning and consistent maintenance turn that into real opportunities.

Build it. Ship it. Let it work for you. 💪

👉 Full guide, narrative frameworks, and 30-day plan: Build Your Personal Website on GitHub With Ease — Unicorn Platform

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u/Sinha_Rohit Sinha_Rohit · 3 d ago

Appreciate your feedback

Audit season exposes fragmented data, manual reporting, and poor decision traceability, making it difficult for NBFCs to produce reliable documentation and audit trails. When borrower data, underwriting logic, and compliance records live across disconnected systems, audits become reactive fire drills instead of routine validation.

Many NBFCs still walk into audit season relying on a messy mix of spreadsheets, scattered emails, and reports they've had to pull together by hand. This usually leads to compliance teams staying up all night and underwriters struggling to explain decisions that don't have a clear trail.

That's the ground reality. Not a polished compliance operation. Literally staying up all night before audits.

The Three Audit Types They Face — And Where The Pain Is

Concurrent Audit — happens weekly or monthly internally. Checks if daily operations are compliant. This is where the sampling problem lives — they check 5% of loan files because checking 100% is impossible manually.

Statutory Audit — annual, by external CA firm. This is where Big 4 or mid-tier CA firms charge ₹50 lakhs to ₹1 crore to review the NBFC's books and compliance.

RBI Inspection — happens every 2-3 years. RBI examiners walk in. This is the existential event. Non-compliance can result in hefty fines, penalties, or even cancellation of the NBFC's license. Brandz Magazine

The concurrent audit is your entry point. It happens continuously. It's the most manual. It has the most sampling blind spots. And fixing it doesn't require a 6-month security review.

I was thinking of why don't we have compliance system, where one can open a workflow (for simplicity I am only considering loan workflow for now).

Step 1: Create a Workflow . Give Description, borrowers name, Loan type , amount etc

Step 2: Dump all relevant document for this workflow (from LMS, CMS, MAILS etc )

And AI properly generate a compliance report for this workflow , with mentioning violation in document and overall workflow , and gather and compile evidence for all the passed compliance checklist.

The Ai would give its report with confidence score and be transparent of why it point out violation with its thinking (Complete whitebox).

Do you think this can be helpful for compliance team as the current audit what I understood is mostly manual and data is living in silos ? Please take loan as workflow for explaining your feedbacks if needed.

What you guys think about this ??

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u/m m · 4 d ago

Cal AI was removed because it used Stripe (via Link) for subscriptions instead of Apple's in-app purchase system.

The payment sheet showed "Pay another way" routing to external billing, which violates Apple's guidelines (3.1.1) for digital goods/subscriptions. Publicly highlighting the higher ARPU setup drew Apple's attention, leading to the takedown. It should be back after they fix it.

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