About Ticket-Safe Sanitizer
Last updated: 2026-02-25
Ticket-Safe Sanitizer is a browser-first toolkit for teams that need to share technical evidence during incident response without leaking credentials or personal data. The product focuses on a practical workflow: paste or upload input, sanitize locally, review output, then share only the redacted version.
Who built this
Who this is for
We built this for developers, support engineers, SRE teams, and technical operations staff who routinely exchange logs, cURL commands, and HAR traces across internal teams and external vendors. It is especially useful when escalation speed matters but security/compliance constraints are strict.
What the product does
- Redacts common credential and secret patterns from logs, JSON, cURL, and HAR content.
- Generates a redaction report so users can inspect what changed.
- Provides review warnings for suspicious leftovers that may require manual inspection.
- Supports rule packs for provider-specific headers and key names.
- Supports copy/download formats for incident handoff workflows (Zendesk, Jira, Slack, Linear, Notion, GitHub).
What the product does not claim
Ticket-Safe Sanitizer is a risk-reduction tool, not a security guarantee. No automatic redaction system can cover every custom format. Final human review remains required before sharing evidence outside your security boundary.
Data handling model
By default, sanitization runs in the browser. Users can inspect output before copying or downloading. We do not require account creation to run core tools.
Analytics are limited to product telemetry such as event names and small counts. Raw incident payloads are not intended for analytics ingestion.
Quality and trust loop
Product quality is maintained through a public loop: coverage docs, browser test lab cases, community rule-pack submissions, and changelog transparency. This structure makes behavior verifiable and improves coverage over time.
Advertising and independence
Advertising, when shown, is clearly labeled. Editorial and product guidance are written for practical safety outcomes, not sponsor influence. If any sponsorship model changes in the future, disclosure policy will be updated in the editorial policy page.
Contact and corrections
If you find a factual error, outdated guidance, or unsafe edge case, report it through Contact or the contribution forms. We prioritize security-impacting corrections and document meaningful changes in the changelog.