Claim your server
Claiming proves you own the repository, and unlocks the author-declared band on your server’s page: safer-mode flags, intended scopes, recommended config, and a badge you can paste into your README.
Claiming
cmd:sha256:9e06e0e4a1bd53b1dfd5436b523decc87fb0b1d3bc6abcbdc2e021d353b1d9e6
These badges already work today — claiming adds the author band on top.
Live count of public repos observed wiring this server up.
[](/server/cmd/sha256%3A9e06e0e4a1bd53b1dfd5436b523decc87fb0b1d3bc6abcbdc2e021d353b1d9e6)The band this page currently sits in — observed, never a verdict.
[](/server/cmd/sha256%3A9e06e0e4a1bd53b1dfd5436b523decc87fb0b1d3bc6abcbdc2e021d353b1d9e6)- 1
Prove ownership
Sign in with GitHub. You can claim any server whose repository is under your account — we match the repo owner to your GitHub login.
- 2
Add context
Declare safer-mode flags, intended scopes, and recommended config — stated intent, shown as its own band, never blended with static facts.
- 3
Embed the badge
Copy the Markdown snippet from your page into your README. Every badge links back and reflects your current signals.
Claiming is a public ownership proof, not a contribution — no data leaves your machine.