You've never built a company before. Security was never in your plan.

We'll walk with you. Securie is the security co-founder you don't have.

This is for you if…

  • Building your first company
  • Figuring things out as you go
  • About to take your first real money
  • Hoping you don't mess up something important early

The moments you feel this

The 'am I doing this right' spiral

You read advice that contradicts itself. You can't tell which applies to you. You don't know who to trust.

The first pivotal decision

You're about to pick an auth provider or a database setup. Wrong choice means painful migration later. Right choice is invisible.

The regret story you read from another founder

You read a postmortem of someone who lost their company to one security bug. You wonder if you're making the same mistake right now.

What Securie does for you

Watches for the mistakes first-time founders make

We've cataloged the 50 most common AI-built-app security bugs. The ones other founders made and wrote postmortems about. We catch them in your code.

Explains why each fix matters

Every alert teaches you something. After 6 months you'll know more about security than 90% of founders — without trying.

Grows with your company

Free while you're solo. Paid tier when you're a team. Enterprise when you're buying Snyk + Vanta + Lakera anyway.

What you don't need to know

  • Everything a 10-year-career security engineer knows
  • What you don't know you don't know

What you actually do

  1. Install
  2. Trust the process
  3. Learn by reading the fixes Securie suggests

Most breaches happen at first-time-founder companies. Most of those breaches were preventable with a scanner running on every commit.

But wait…

I'm cheap — will this cost me later?

Free while you're small. By the time you're big enough to pay, you'll know whether it's worth it. Most founders decide yes.

I want to learn this myself.

Securie teaches you every week through the alerts and fixes. You will learn security faster by using Securie than by reading OWASP.