Install Huzzler App

Install our app for a better experience and quick access to Huzzler.

The #1 Founder Community

Join the Huzzler founder community

A community where real founders build together. No fake gurus, no AI spam.

Join 2,477 founders

Community member ari
Community member amol-parikh
Community member zack-ho
An AI-free community

Huzzler is a strictly AI-free community

Stripe-verified revenue

No fake MRR screenshots. Stripe-verified revenue only

Genuine Feedback

Real advice from founders who've actually built

Authentic Connections

Network with serious builders, not wannabes

Top New Old
Ari Nakos
@ari
3 weeks ago
Why Security Headers are important and 85% of Wordpress Sites fail them

Every website is an HTML page, which comprises of 2 parts.

The Body, which is what we see on this webpage and Header, which is what makes the page secure, discoverable, and interactive.

When it comes to the security aspect of our webpage, there are a LOT of variables to take into consideration that extend beyond the Header section of an HTML, of course. However, that's out of scope for this post.

What prompted me to look into this was an article that showed how so many WordPress sites (which still dominate the web) are insecure.

Today, I want to focus on a few simple tools you could use to resolve this yourself whether or not you use WordPress.

  1. SecurityHeaders.com - A free tool by Snyk, which you can use to scan sites for yourself or your clients
  2. A n8n automation to save the scan results on Gsheets and provide actionable recommendations and either handle them yourself, or use a code editor such as Claude Code, Cursor, etc to handle them

If WHY is not clear, just consider these 2 edge cases.

  • A failed Content Security Policy, can result into someone stealing your cookies or even injecting an unsafe form that could result into your PII and credit card info being leaked.
  • A failed Permissions Policy, could result into your Mic/Camera being accessible by malicious actors.

Long story short, take Security seriously.

/
Image 1
Image 2
Image 3
/
Amol Parikh
@amol-parikh
3 weeks ago
Happy to announce Thumbflip to A/B test thumbnails on YouTube

thumbflip.co is more customized than YouTube's "Test and Compare" feature.

  1. Upload up to 10 thumbnails per video
  2. Choose number & frequency of rotation - hourly/daily/weekly
  3. Choose your own test duration
  4. Metrics per thumbnail available on the next day after the test ends - views, Avg. View Duration, Likes, Comments, Impressions, Click Through Rate, Shares, Subscribers Gained, Average View Percentage
Zack Ho
@zack-ho
4 weeks ago
Shipped My First Extension (as promised)

Two weeks ago I posted about learning WXT to build my first browser extension. Well, I shipped it just 3 days ago - Email Buttons for Gmail.

What it does: Adds styled buttons and QR codes to Gmail emails.

Tech stack:

  • WXT + Vite + React
  • TypeScript
  • Landing page (Next.js)
  • Stripe

What I like about WXT:

  • Content script hot reload was a game-changes during dev
  • Built-in bundling handled everything (especially come to publishing time)
  • Abstracts away the complexities of Chrome APIs, which make feature building the only thing I focus on

Results after 3 days of launch:

  • 10 organic installs (I didn't share to any launchpads or directories like I did for NewsletterStack)
  • Launching on Product Hunt today (If you want to support me - PH link) - We are at the 4th place for product of the day at the moment I'm writing this.
  • So far, the reactions have been great especially from the marketing communities. (will share more once the metrics come in, chrome web store data is lagging 2 days behind)

WXT 100% delivered on the smooth DX. I highly recommend for anyone building extensions.

/
Image 1
Image 2
/