CloakHQ/CloakBrowser

Stealth Chromium that passes every bot detection test. Drop-in Playwright replacement with source-level fingerprint patches. 30/30 tests passed.

View on GitHub

What it does

CloakBrowser is a modified version of Chrome that disguises itself as a regular human-operated browser, allowing automated scripts to browse the web without being blocked by anti-bot systems like Cloudflare or Google's reCAPTCHA. Developers can swap it into their existing web automation code with just a few lines, and it handles everything from mimicking natural mouse movements to hiding the technical signals that normally flag automated browsers.

Why it matters

Any business that relies on scraping competitor prices, monitoring the web, or automating research workflows hits a wall when sites block bots — CloakBrowser removes that wall without requiring expensive third-party proxy or CAPTCHA-solving services. As anti-bot infrastructure becomes more aggressive and widespread, tools like this become critical leverage for startups that need data access to compete.

16Active

On the radar — signal detected

Stars
13.0k
Forks
1.0k
Contributors
4
Language
Python
Downloads (7d)
18.8k

pypi/cloakbrowser

Score updated May 11, 2026

Related projects

Quarkdown is a writing and publishing tool that lets you create books, academic papers, presentations, and websites all from a single document using an enhanced version of Markdown (a simple text formatting language). Instead of juggling multiple tools for different output formats, you write once and the system automatically produces polished, print-ready results in whatever format you need.

// why it matters With over 11,000 stars on GitHub, there is clear demand for a unified authoring tool that eliminates the fragmentation between documentation, publishing, and presentation software — a space currently dominated by expensive or clunky incumbents like LaTeX and Microsoft Office. For builders, this signals a growing market of creators and researchers who want developer-friendly, version-controllable workflows for professional publishing without the overhead of traditional desktop tools.

Kotlin14.0k stars385 forks16 contrib

Bun is an all-in-one toolkit that lets developers run, build, test, and manage dependencies for JavaScript and TypeScript applications — replacing several separate tools that teams typically need to juggle. It's designed to be dramatically faster than existing alternatives like Node.js, meaning apps start quicker and development workflows take less time.

// why it matters For teams building JavaScript-based products, switching to Bun can meaningfully cut cloud computing costs and speed up developer productivity without requiring major code changes. With nearly 90,000 stars on GitHub and a rapidly growing community, it signals a serious shift in how modern web and server-side applications are built — and investors should note it's positioning itself as the default runtime for the next generation of JavaScript development.

Rust91.5k stars4.6k forks916 contrib

Directus connects to any existing database and instantly turns it into a full backend system — giving teams a visual dashboard to manage content, plus automatic APIs that apps and websites can use to access that data. Think of it as a control panel and data engine that eliminates the need to build a custom admin interface or backend from scratch.

// why it matters With over 35,000 stars and nearly 550 contributors, Directus has become a go-to choice for teams that want to move fast without locking into a proprietary platform — making it a strong signal that the 'bring your own database' approach is winning in the headless CMS and backend-as-a-service market. For founders and PMs, it means faster time-to-market and full ownership of your data, which is increasingly a competitive and compliance advantage.

TypeScript35.7k stars4.8k forks547 contrib

Web Platform Tests (WPT) is a massive shared test suite that checks whether all major web browsers — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, and others — behave consistently when displaying websites and web apps. Think of it as a universal quality checklist that browser makers run to confirm their software follows the agreed-upon rules of how the web should work.

// why it matters When browsers behave differently, developers must build workarounds that add cost and slow down shipping — WPT is the industry's shared mechanism for reducing that friction, making the web a more reliable platform for products to run on. For builders, broader browser consistency means less money spent on cross-browser bug fixes and greater confidence that web-based products will reach users as intended, regardless of what device or browser they use.

HTML5.9k stars3.8k forks3245 contrib
// SUBSCRIBE

The repos that moved this week, why they matter, and what to watch next. One email. No noise.