인셔셔RSS 관심 있는 블로그, 뉴스, 기술 정보를 효율적으로 추적하고 읽으세요
원문 읽기 InertiaRSS에서 열기

추천 피드

The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
S
Schneier on Security
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
IT之家
IT之家
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
I
Intezer
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
博客园 - Franky
月光博客
月光博客
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
T
Tenable Blog
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
D
DataBreaches.Net
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
S
Secure Thoughts
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
B
Blog
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
The Cloudflare Blog
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
W
WeLiveSecurity
H
Heimdal Security Blog
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
G
Google Developers Blog
O
OpenAI News
V
V2EX
罗磊的独立博客
博客园_首页
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
H
Hacker News: Front Page
博客园 - 叶小钗
T
Tor Project blog
AI
AI

DEV Community

Authentication Security Deep Dive: From Brute Force to Salted Hashing (With Java Examples) Why AI Systems Don’t Fail — They Drift Spilling beans for how i learn for exam😁"Reinforcement Learning Cheat Sheet" I Replaced Chrome with Safari for AI Browser Automation. Here's What Broke (and What Finally Worked) How Python Borrows Other People's Work The $40 Architecture: Processing 1 Billion API Requests with 99.99% Uptime Vibe Coding: A Workflow Guide (From Zero to SaaS) Most webhook security guides protect the wrong side. The scary part is delivery. Headless CMS for TanStack Start: Build a Blog with Cosmic EU Age Verification App "Hacked in 2 Minutes" — What Actually Happened Comfy Cloud’s delete function does not actually remove files Running AI Models on GPU Cloud Servers: A Beginner Guide Event-driven media intelligence with AWS Step Functions and Bedrock I scored 500 AI prompts across 8 quality dimensions — here's what broke How to Call Google Gemini API from Next.js (Free Tier, No Backend Needed) The Portal Protocol: Reclaiming Human Connection in the Age of AI How to Fix Your Team's Scattered Knowledge Problem With a Self-Hosted Forum Intro to tc Cloud Functors: A Graph-First Mental Model for the Modern Cloud Designing Multi-Tenant Backends With Both Ownership and Team Access I Built a Neumorphic CSS Library with 77+ Components — Here's What I Learned PostgreSQL Performance Optimization: Why Connection Pooling Is Critical at Scale Cómo construí un SaaS multi-rubro para gestionar expensas en Argentina con FastAPI + Vue 3 🚀 I Built an Ethical Hacking Scanner Tool – Open Source Project I Replaced /usage and /context in Claude Code With a Single Statusline A Pythonic Way to Handle Emails (IMAP/SMTP) with Auto-Discovery and AI-Ready Design I Collected 8.9 Million Polymarket Price Points — Here's What I Found About How Markets Really Move EcoTrack AI — Carbon Footprint Tracker & Dashboard Everyone's Using AI. No One Agrees How. 5 self-hosted ebook managers worth trying in 2026 Building Your First AI Agent with LangChain: From Chatbot to Autonomous Assistant Common SOC 2 Failures (Real World) Stop Vibe-Checking Your AI App: A Practical Guide to Evals How to Use SonarQube and SonarScanner Locally to Level Up Your Code Quality Your Next To-Do App Is Dead — I Replaced Mine with an OpenClaw AI Sign a Nostr event in 60 lines of Python using coincurve — no nostr-sdk, no nbxplorer, no rust toolchain ITGC Audit Explained Like You’re in Big 4 Patch Tuesday abril 2026: Microsoft parcha 163 vulnerabilidades y un zero-day en SharePoint Stop scraping everything: a better way to track competitor price changes Listing on MCPize + the Official MCP Registry while routing payments OUTSIDE the marketplace — how I kept 100% of my x402 revenue Building an AI-Powered Risk Intelligence System Using Serverless Architecture Why We Ripped Function Overloading Out of Our AI Toolchain Testing AI-Generated Code: How to Actually Know If It Works SaaS Churn Is Killing Your Business. Here Is What to Do About It (Without a Support Team) The Speed of AI Is No Longer Linear - And Self-Improving Models Are Why How to Implement RBAC for MCP Tools: A Practical Guide for Engineering Teams From Standard Quote to Persuasive Proposal: AI Automation for Arborists I built a CLI that scaffolds complete multi-tenant SaaS apps Axios CVE-2025–62718: The Silent SSRF Bug That Could Be Hiding in Your Node.js App Right Now The dashboard that ended our friendship Data Pipelines Explained Simply (and How to Build Them with Python) The Hidden Cost of AI Systems Nobody Talks About. undefined vs undeclared, and how typeof behaves Switching from file-based jobs to NATS/Kafka in Rust without changing code io_uring Adventures: Rust Servers That Love Syscalls Why Agentic AI is Killing the Traditional Database The POUR principles of web accessibility for developers and designers Quantum Neural Network 3D — A Deep Dive into Interactive WebGL Visualization How To Install Caveman In Codex On macOS And Windows Automation Pipeline Reliability: Why Your Workflow Breaks When Nobody Is Watching I Built an 'Open World' AI Coding Agent — It Works From ANY Folder From Freelancing to Product: A Tech Service Company's SaaS Transformation China's AI Giants: Adding Tencent Hunyuan & ByteDance Doubao to AI University (74 Providers) On the Vibe Coders and Their Lies clerk: Auto-Summarize Your Claude Code Sessions AI Weekly — 2026/04/10–04/17 | The Model Lockdown Is Here, but the Toolchain Is the Real Battleground AI 週報 — 2026/04/10–2026/04/17 模型封鎖潮來了,但工具鏈才是真戰場 Maybe this is how Open-Source apps are born... 🚀 Fine-Tune LLMs with LoRA and QLoRA: 2026 Guide tRPC v11 + Next.js App Router: End-to-End Type Safety Without the Boilerplate ShadCN UI in 2026: Why I Stopped Installing Component Libraries and Started Owning My Components SaaS Billing in React Server Components: Stripe + Supabase Without a Single `useEffect` Join our DEV Weekend Challenge — $1,000 in Prizes Across TEN winners! Submissions Due April 20 at 6:59 AM UTC. Implementing FSRS Spaced Repetition in Flutter + Supabase — Adding Memory Science to an AI Learning App "I Texted My Localhost From the Train — Claude Code Fixed the Bug Before I Got Home" I Built a Sales Prep AI and It Went Deeper Than Expected Design to Code #2: One JSON, Eleven Outputs Solving the 100M-Row Problem: A Summary Table Pattern for High-Volume Push Notification Logs Flutter Web With Wasm: What Actually Changes For Developers I Built 50 Royalty-Free Soundtracks for My Side Project in a Weekend Using AI Music Generation The Vibe Coding Security Checklist: 7 Things to Check Before You Ship Stop Letting Googlebot Guess Fix Your React App's SEO Right Desconstruindo o Streaming do LinkedIn: Como Criar um Engine de Extração de Vídeo de Alta Performance com HLS e FFmpeg (EDA Part-1) EDA (Exploratory Data Analysis) Explained With Real Life — Why Looking at Your Data Is the Most Important Step in Machine Learning Brand Relationship Management at Scale: Our 4-Touch Outreach System for 200+ Brands Why String.fromEnvironment() Might Return an Empty String in Dart JGuardrails 1.0.0 — Hardening Java LLM Apps Against Jailbreaks, Toxicity, and Prompt Injection Plan and Schedule a Full Week of Threads Content From One Claude Conversation Coding Cat Oran Ep3, Five Tables Changed Everything Updated: BFF Pattern I'm done watching freelancers get buried by 200 proposals. So I'm building the alternative. This is my first post BFS Algorithm in Java Step by Step Tutorial with Examples Tracking LLM Pricing Monthly: An Open Dataset for 22 AI Models How We Measure Content ROI on a Comparison Site: Revenue Attribution Without Perfect Data Introducing Nova AI Ops: The AI-Native Operating System for SRE Teams I built a free desktop video downloader for Windows — Grabbit How Talkie OCR Helps Vision-Impaired & Dyslexic Users Read the World Around Them VRCFaceTracking安装和iPhone面捕配置教程,有bug Even CrowdStrike Can't See Your Agents The Automation Gold Rush: What n8n Workflows and Claude Are Opening Up for Developers Right Now
How do you verify GitHub contributions without trusting self-reported skills?
Alex · 2026-05-23 · via DEV Community

I've been thinking about a problem that doesn't get talked about enough in hiring: the gap between what someone claims about their work on linkedin and what they actually did.

Anyone can list "open source contributor" on their resume. Anyone can paste a GitHub repo URL in a portfolio. But without looking at the actual commit history and contributor data — you have no idea if that person wrote 80% of the codebase or merged one typo fix three years ago.

So I started building a system to verify this properly. Here's what I learned — without giving away the methodology we use, because honestly, the moment you publish your exact algorithm, people optimize for it rather than actually doing the work.

The naive approach fails immediately

The first instinct is to just check if the person's GitHub handle appears in the contributor list. Simple, right?

Not quite. Three problems come up immediately.

People have multiple GitHub accounts. Work account, personal account, old account from college. A developer might have significant contributions spread across two or three handles. Checking one handle misses the full picture.

Contribution depth varies wildly. Being listed as a contributor could mean 2,000 commits or 1 commit. The contributor list alone doesn't tell you which. You need actual commit counts per author to understand the depth of contribution.

Public repos can be submitted by anyone. I can submit any famous open source repo to a portfolio system and imply I contributed to it. Without verifying my actual handle against the contributor data, the system has no way to know if I wrote the core architecture or just starred the repo.

What actually works — the principles

I'm not going to share the exact scoring formula. But I can share the principles that make verification meaningful.

Verify account ownership first

Before you can verify contributions, you need to verify identity. The only reliable way to confirm someone owns a GitHub account is OAuth. When someone authenticates via GitHub OAuth, you get a cryptographic proof of ownership — not a claim.

This is the identity anchor. Every contribution check runs against verified handles only. No claims accepted.

Handle the multi-account reality honestly

Developers legitimately use multiple GitHub accounts. A good verification system needs to support this — each additional account verified through its own OAuth flow.

The critical constraint: one GitHub account should only be linkable to one professional identity. Otherwise the whole system can be gamed by linking someone else's high-signal account to your profile.

This requires exclusive handle claiming. First claim wins. If a handle is already associated with another profile — it's blocked. No exceptions.

Contribution depth matters more than presence

There's a meaningful difference between someone who authored 40% of a codebase and someone who fixed a typo. Both show up in the contributor list. Only one actually shaped the project.

The verification system needs to reflect this distinction. Not all verified contributions are equal. Depth matters. History matters. Consistency over time matters more than a spike of activity.

Unverified doesn't mean worthless — but it means discounted

Not everything can be verified through OAuth. Public repos, old contributions, work done under inaccessible accounts — these are real but can't be fully verified.

The right approach isn't to ignore unverified sources. It's to discount them heavily and label them clearly. A user should always know what's verified and what isn't. A recruiter should always be able to see the difference at a glance.

Transparency about what can and can't be verified is more credible than pretending everything is confirmed.

Gaming prevention is architectural, not cosmetic

If your verification system can be gamed by submitting famous repos you didn't write, it's not a verification system — it's a vanity metric generator.

The aggregation rules matter as much as the scoring rules. How multiple sources combine, how unverified sources interact with verified ones, how the system handles edge cases — these decisions determine whether the final score means anything.

We've spent a lot of time on this. The details stay internal.

What this doesn't solve

No verification system is perfect. Worth being honest about the limitations.

Commit squashing — some teams squash all PRs into single commits before merging. A developer who wrote 40 separate commits might appear as 1 in the contributor list.

Pair programming — code written together often gets committed under one person's handle. The other person's contribution is invisible to the API.

Private repos — everything above works for public repos. Private repos require broader OAuth scope, which is a bigger ask for users.

Old accounts — significant contributions under an account you no longer have access to can't be verified without OAuth on that account.

These are real limitations. A verification badge isn't a guarantee — it's evidence. The weight of that evidence depends on the depth and breadth of verified sources.

Why this matters now

LinkedIn profiles are self-reported claims. AI writes perfect ones in 30 seconds. Endorsements come from people who've never seen your code. The entire professional identity system is built on statements that cost nothing to make and nothing to fabricate.

GitHub commits are different. A three-year commit history with consistent cadence, real collaborators, and downstream ecosystem impact — that can't be generated by a chatbot. That's real signal.

The question is how to surface that signal in a way that's portable, shareable, and resistant to gaming. That's the problem worth solving.

Where this is heading

I've been building this verification logic into a larger system called Warrant — a proof-of-work portfolio that computes verified scores from GitHub signals rather than letting engineers describe their own skills.

The exact methodology stays opaque — intentionally. The moment you publish the formula, people optimize for the formula instead of doing real work. We'd rather be the PageRank of professional identity than the ATS keyword game.

If you're an engineer curious to see what your verified GitHub signals look like, you can try it at warrant-plum.vercel.app. Free, currently in beta, no credit card.

If you've thought hard about contribution verification — I'd genuinely like to hear what edge cases you ran into. The ones I listed above are the ones keeping me up at night.