Launch HN: Better Auth (YC X25) – Authentication Framework for TypeScript
Hi HN! We’re Bereket and KinfeMichael of Better Auth (https://www.better-auth.com/), a comprehensive authentication framework for TypeScript that lets you implement everything from simple auth flows to enterprise-grade systems directly on your own database, embedded in your backend.
To be clear—we’re not building a 3rd party auth service. Our goal is to make rolling your own auth so ridiculously easy that you’ll never need one.
Here are some YouTube videos explaining how it works (we did make our own video but weren’t happy with it and these videos do a great job):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hFtufpaMcLM - a really good overview
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QurjwJHCoHQ - also a good overview and dives a little deeper into the code
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RKqHrE0KyeE - short and clear
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Atev8Nxpw7c - with TanStack framework
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6rP9d3RWo8 - a full-on 2 hour tutorial
Auth has been a pain point for many developers in the TypeScript ecosystem for a while. Not because there aren’t options but because most fall into 2 buckets: (1) Third-party services like Auth0 which own your user data, lock you into a black-box solution and are often super expensive; or (2) open source libraries like NextAuth that cover the basics but leave you stitching your own solution together from there.
For Better Auth. the kick off moment was building a web analytics platform and wanting to add an organization feature - things like workspaces, teams, members, and granular permissions. I assumed there’d be something out there I could plug in to NextAuth (the popular and kind of the only library), but there wasn’t. The only options were to build everything from scratch or switch to a 3rd party auth provider. I even tried hacking together a wrapper around NextAuth to support those features, but it was hacky. That’s when we decided to take a step back and build a proper auth library from the ground up with a plugin ecosystem that lets you start simple and scale as needed. That frustration turned into Better Auth.
Better Auth lets you roll your own auth directly on your backend and database, with support for everything from simple auth flows to enterprise-grade systems without relying on 3rd party services.
It comes with built-in features for common auth flows, and you can extend it as needed through a plugin ecosystem whether that’s 2FA, passkeys, organizations, multi-session, SSO, or even billing integration with Stripe.
Unlike 3rd party auth providers, we’re just a library you install in your own project. It’s free forever, lives entirely in your codebase, and gives you full control. You get all the features you’d expect from something like Auth0 or Clerk plus even more through our plugin system, including things like billing integrations with Stripe or Polar. Most libraries stop at the basics but Better Auth is designed to scale with your needs while keeping things simple when you don’t need all the extras.
We’re currently building an infrastructure layer that works alongside the framework to offer features that are hard to deliver as just a library—e.g. an admin dashboard with user analytics, bot/fraud/abuse detection, secondary session storage, and more. This will be our commercial offering. For this, there’s a waitlist at https://www.better-auth.build. However, this is only optional infrastructure for teams that need these capabilities. The library is free and open source and will remain so.
We’d love your feedback!
A few months ago, I found a security vulnerability for better-auth. Within 24 hours of reporting the vulnerability to the team, it was patched, a notice had been posted, and I had been credited with a CVE. THAT is how you do it, folks!
This team is top notch. The community leadership, responsiveness, and development speed has been incredible. The project itself is also great--this library is so much more flexible than others and requires much less effort to wrap my brain around. I'm so happy that this library is getting the recognition it deserves.
Congrats on the launch! Better Auth has a level of universal love from developers that's really seen.
Just one suggestion - remove the F-bombs from the testimonials on your homepage. There are various firewall intel providers that will put you on the bad lists because of this. You usually learn this the hard way :/
Thanks for the kind note! And good suggestion. I was meaning to update that for a while.
Does it handle:
- Federated sign-in/out? In next-auth, it is a giant pain to implement: https://github.com/nextauthjs/next-auth/discussions/3938
- Automated refreshing of JWT tokens on the client-side? I always end up having to implement my own logic around this. The big problem is if you have multiple API calls going out and they all require JWT auth, you need to check the JWT validity and block the calls until it is refreshed. In next-auth on the server-side, this is impossible to do since that side is generally stateless, and so you end up with multiple refresh calls happening for the same token.
- The ability to have multiple auth sessions at once, like in a SaaS app where you might belong to multiple accounts / organizations (your intro paragraph sounds like it does)
- Handle how multiple auth sessions are managed if the user happens to open up multiple tabs and swaps accounts in another tab
- Account switching using a Google provider? This seems to be a hard ask for providers like FusionAuth and Cognito. You can't use the Google connector directly but instead use a generic OAuth2 connector where you can specify custom parameters when making the initial OAuth2 flow with Google. The use-case is when a user clicks on the Google sign-in button, it should go to the Google account switcher / selector instead of signing in the user immediately if they have an existing signed-in Google session.
- Not right now, but there’s already an open issue and a PR in progress.
- We don’t use JWTs directly, and sessions always require state (it’s not stateless). And yeah, both the client and server handles automatic session refresh.
- Yes, we support both multiple sessions or having different organizations open in different tab: https://www.better-auth.com/docs/plugins/multi-session
- Yes, that’s possible, you just need to set the `prompt` parameter to `select_account`
As another asked, "why?" on no JWT? It makes interfacing with our API servers so much easier as we don't need to maintain infra for sessions and wouldn't be limited by the 4kb limit for sending cookies.
I use better auth for a real app
There is a plugin provided by better auth for jwt https://www.better-auth.com/docs/plugins/jwt
We dont need it since everything is a single "server" and cookies are good enough. JWT would be added complexity ( e.g sign out ) that i find it better to not be set as a default.
bonus reading http://cryto.net/~joepie91/blog/2016/06/19/stop-using-jwt-fo...
> We don’t use JWTs directly
Why?
Evidently they prefer to be less secure by default.
JWTs aren’t less or more secure by default see the comments posted above
How did you resolve the multiple refresh calls issue? Do you use swr hooks on the front end? Been thinking about how to do this myself.
No hooks on the FE side. We use a global lock via a promise. Our API clients are not tied to react in any way.
For all API calls, if the lock is not set, it checks if the JWT is still valid. If it is not, then the lock is set by assigning a new promise to it and saving the resolve call as an external variable to be called after the refresh is done (which resolves the held promise on the other calls, allowing the latest token to be used).
All calls await the lock; it either waits for the refresh to complete or just moves on and performs validation with the currently set token.
Looks like this:
- await on lock; if the lock has been resolved, will just continue on
- Check for JWT validity via exp check (the API server itself would be responsible for checking signature and other validity factors); if not valid, update lock with a new promise and hold the resolver. Perform refresh. Release lock by resolving the promise.
- Use current / refreshed JWT for API call
One of our devs evaluated you guys and loved it and I do too, but you guys don’t have SCIM support which makes it really hard for us to justify moving to. We moved to an arguably inferior product because telling our product team “you’ll get scim” as part of an auth overhaul is an easier conversation. If you want enterprise customers, I’d recommend nailing down your enterprise feature set~ but the good news is that our devs liked your model the most so it’s just a matter of work for you guys to expand your functionality!
Same here, passed on it because of scim
Better Auth is awesome and I didn't even realize they hadn't publicly launched yet - I'm using it in production apps, and have seen it being used in all kinds of real-world use cases. IMO it's the best open-source option for a TypeScript developer who wants to implement authentication.
About the dashboard - would this just be an interface to my existing Better Auth setup (e.g. if I had customized the underlying data storage) or are you hosting credentials yourself?
You have my sincerest gratitude for building this incredibly useful library and documenting it so well.
Thanks for the kind words - really appreciate it! And yes, it connects directly to your existing setup (the dashboard is mostly just a UI). What you’re really “buying” from us are the additional features on the dashboard like bot protection, analytics, etc...when you need them. We’re still figuring out the pricing, but most likely, the base dashboard will just be free ;)
Awesome! I used Better Auth for consulting work helping clients build MVPs, and if I could hand them a beautiful admin dashboard rather than linking it up to Retool or their BI tool of choice, they would instantly go for it - especially with all the bot protection and analytics features that I don't have time to build.
One of the reasons I prefer BA is because I retain a lot of flexibility with designing the rest of the system around the authentication. So for example, if I want to have an additional column per user, it's a lot easier to wrap my head around adding a new Postgres column than using some API for appending data to a user in Cognito/Auth0/Okta/etc in some rigid format.
Sold!
I've been waiting for something like this for the last year or so. There's so much that's SO CLOSE, but nothing quite as simple as "npm install -> add necessary config -> npm publish". That's what I've been waiting for and that's what it looks like you are offering here.
Very excited to spin up a new Hostinger VPS and slap this on there to provide syncing for local-first apps. If it's as easy as your docs make it seem, this will save a ton of time and headaches!
Is there support for dynamic sign in provider urls? One of the deal breakers (in addition to federated sign in/sign out being a pain) for us with next-auth was that we have certain customers whose security requirements include pointing subdomains that they own at our servers. So we would need to be able to use some logic to determine where the sign-in redirect should take a given user.
Yes. You should check the SSO plugin which would allow you to store the config in your db and can retrieve it dynamically.
Sounds great! I'm interested to hear, how does this solution compare with open source, self-hosted authn components like Keycloak and Ory Kratos? While it's a bit more leg work integrating those, I've found that it's useful that they're self-contained and run in their own environment/container; but I have also sometimes wished that the data was more tightly integrated with my own application, which I guess is what you're aiming for.
Yes, that’s exactly what we’re aiming for. I think there are many reasons to tightly couple auth with your app. As you said, self-hosting auth servers and integrating them often isn’t a fun experience and that’s one of the reasons 3rd party auth providers became so popular.
In the JavaScript/TypeScript ecosystem, libraries like NextAuth still have a huge number of users for the same reason: ease of use. And with the rise of full-stack TypeScript apps where both the frontend and backend live together and share a strong type system, it makes even more sense to keep all your context in one place.
That said, if you ever decide to self-host Better Auth in a dedicated container, you still can.
Most people will reach for BetterAuth when they would reach for NextAuth. Basically, when you want to integrate OIDC or SSO of some kind.
Back when I was looking at it a couple of months ago, the big thing that popped out was that BetterAuth supports email and password out of the box, where NextAuth seems to have a preachy disclaimer about how email and password is inherently insecure, so they leave you to your own devices to implement password hashing and the like.
That did give a sense that NextAuth was the first to dominate the space and feels as though they can dictate morals.
BetterAuth seems to be a bit more developer-focused.
> where NextAuth seems to have a preachy disclaimer about how email and password is inherently insecure
Yeah I needed a login & password auth last friday and I was so frustrated with NextAuth I ended up using nginx to set up http basic auth.
Super happy users :) Agree w/ what everyone has said. For us an extra benefit is the ability to host our user data in our own DB so that we can then dig into it w/ Index. Clerk keeps the data locked in and their "analytics" page is very very limited.
I happened to pick up Clerk for its ease of use and accessible free tier for my SaaS. The data locking was “solvable” but way too much effort as a solo dev. I had to use their webhook tool and set up a separate Inngest service to sync the data.
I’m very curious about Better Auth from what I’ve heard so far. I wish I knew about it sooner!
Better auth is by far the best option out there. We've adopted it and couldn't be happier not having to manage 2 sources of truth.
Have been a proud better auth user for the last 6 months! Loved it so far, especially the fact that it's FOSS. Now that it's a venture-funded YC company, I am worried about using it. Should I be?
As I mentioned in the post, our goal is to help developers own their Auth. And now that we’re funded, it’d help us pursue this goal even more aggressively and give people more confidence.
The product looks polished. I have 3 questions:
1. If I am using Supabase for DB, should I use Supabase auth or use Better auth which would anyways use Supabase DB for saving data.
2. When using Supabase auth, they don't give access to the auth.users table and for saving additional user details like country we need a seprate profiles table. If I use Better-auth what should be the approach for saving additional details?
3. How Better Auth Infrastructure is different than Clerk or Supabase auth?
1. Depends on whether you need RLS or not. We're working on improving the Better Auth + Supabase RLS story by collaborating with them, but if you're not relying on RLS for authorization, I’d go with Better Auth. You’ll get more features, and it’ll feel more integrated with your backend rather than your database. Plus, if you ever want to switch database providers you can.
2. Yeah, you’d need to migrate to Better Auth and move your user table to your main schema. We have a migration guide for Supabase.
3. It’s just additional features built on top of the framework, not a 3rd party auth service. You’ll still use the framework, and when you need those features, you can connect it to the infra to enable them.
i have been your user since the early days, I want to say congrats you guys, I have been recommending your framework to everyone. I appreciate the responsive support you gave me on discord (though in the end, my questions are already on the docs lol)
Nice work! I took better-auth for a test a couple of months ago. I enjoyed the experience, but the DX was pretty poor when using edge frameworks (like Cloudflare Workers) as the CLI tools didn't work. For workers for example, environment variables are not known at build time, rather injected in the "fetch()" handler.
Interested to see how the functionality progresses!
This looks really exciting. I'm sold. I'm planning to migrate to BetterAuth from Firebase Auth in the next few months, how does the two compare? Personally I'm happy with Firebase (migrated from Workos which was so frustrating and lacking in many aspects, or in other words a huge mistake when picking), not so happy about the vendor lock and the vendor itself.
You should be able to get all the features you get from Firebase and much more. The only major downside right now is that we don’t have a Firebase/Firestore adapter yet. So if that’s the database you’re using, you’d need to use a different one for your auth service.
Hi - I'm the founder of WorkOS. Would love any feedback you can share here or via email (mg@workos.com)
Betterauth and WorkOS are pretty different. For example, WorkOS isn't designed exclusively for TypeScript (we support SDKs for a bunch of languages/platforms) and WorkOS runs as a cloud service. The developer experience will always be different because of this.
We also design the platform to be modular, which enables you to just use WorkOS for SSO or SCIM alongside an existing auth stack. We call these the standalone APIs and lots of customers use it this way.
WorkOS is focused on enterprise features for b2b apps and solving problems that come with growing upmarket. Today we power auth for OpenAI, Anthropic, Perplexity, Cursor, Vercel, Plaid, and hundreds more.
We love getting feedback so please feel free to post here, email, or twitter DMs are open. Thanks!
(I also love open source and am glad to see more innovation happening here in the ecosystem!)
Do you have plans to add support for .Net backend?
Congratulations on the launch!
Heavily evaluated better-auth when implementing auth at my current company. Ended up with keycloak because of SAML SSO.
One thing I remember having some issues with was customising schemas with the drizzle adapter. Looks like you've cleared up the documentation more now. I think at the time I was confused as to wether custom schemas were specified in the drizzle adapter options, or inside the the organization plugin.
Basically mixing up these two: https://www.better-auth.com/docs/plugins/organization#custom... https://www.better-auth.com/docs/adapters/drizzle#additional...
Thanks for all your work, it is a really cool library!
Do you have any recommendations on how to get started with Keycloak or just RTFM?
My two cents: Keycloak's UI is pretty self explanatory if you understand OIDC (oauth2 + jwt + specific JWT claims) and, if you have to use it (my condolences, though it's also just interesting to see how crazy specs can get), SAML. I'd strongly suggest reading up on the OpenID Connect spec, including the oauth2 spec, and this will serve you very well in your authn/z journey.
That said, keycloak also does have a great docs site.
I'm very tempted to make the leap from Lucia to Better Auth for a greenfield project, but the thought of jumping yet again from one auth solution to another is making me hesitate. If there are any satisfied (or unsatisfied) devs who have attempted the Lucia -> Better Auth transition, I'd love to hear your thoughts on this!
Hey I just converted my 0-user project from Lucia to Better Auth, and I had a few notes.
Better Auth is great - it just works, but there were a few quirks I had to face, like how it handles everything for you using the auth client instead of giving you helper functions to use to handle login/register requests and make it customizable on the server side
The migration was very easy, since I had no users to worry about, I was able to drop my users and sessions table and use the Better Auth cli to generate a migration with all the tables I could need. Even with some initial problems I had with the auth client and having to restructure my login errors to handle what the auth client returns, I'm happy with my migration, and it opens up a whole host of plugins and features I can easily integrate in the future
Thanks for sharing, you've successfully tipped the Better Auth scales for me... Might be too early to tell, but would you say you prefer Lucia or Better Auth at this point? I really like Lucia because of how little magic there is and how I can understand/control everything related to auth. But I wonder if it loses its luster as a project grows.
I loved Lucia just because it gives you control over absolutely everything you want to do, but I'm starting to like the bits of magic that com with Better Auth - namely things like email verification, password resets, and rate limiting were thing I was planning to implement but dreaded having to code everything whereas they come built-in or as simple plugins for Better Auth.
Alright I'm sold haha. You basically described the emotions I imagined I would've experienced if I transitioned to Better Auth. Just needed to hear it from someone else. Cheers!
Lucia is deprecated https://github.com/lucia-auth/lucia/discussions/1707 so yea i ll jump if I were you
I’ve just used BetterAuth for my project [0]
I’ve never implemented auth before, and was always thinking that it will take me days to get it right.
I’ve done the whole thing in maybe 3 hours.
[0] https://dough.ink/
My experience with auth solutions/libraries is you invariably want to customize some flow/data/functions, but it's impossible because the library isn't flexible enough.
A better solution might be premade auth primitives (oauth providers, db adapters) that you copy paste into your codebase shadcn-style, and modify when necessary.
I feel like "don't roll your own auth" is less true than it was 5-10 years ago as now there is an abundance of good references and core libraries.
We have been using better-auth (open source) for a while, it was immediately a better experience compared to the existing (typescript) auth libraries. Plus no Nextjs lock-in, we migrated off Nextjs to Hono and only had to change the router.
Been using it for the past 2 weeks, love it :)
https://auth.meetingbaas.com
It's a shame I didn't add more providers there since then!
Nit pick: change homepage from:
> git(main) x npm add better-auth
to
> npm add better-auth
"git(main) x" looks odd and like an error.
I thought this was another vercel shill, and cheating up the hackernews ranks LOL
But I tried it today and it’s pretty nice. A few bugs with user creation and custom fields with the beta oauth2 plugin. But overall very solid abstraction that will save lots of time.
Google sign in was a breeze too.
The migrations do not pick up nullable being true for custom fields though, and I see someone else already reported this.
Direct oauth registration works, most everything I need is here!
Been fiending to set up a sideproject that uses this for auth, instantdb for backend, and htmx/web components on the frontend.
I am building a production grade express API generator that lets people download a full production ready with all tooling setup express API with dependencies like ESLint, Prettier, Husky, Commitlint etc configured. One of the steps lets people choose an authentication provider and I intend to add your library
How does Better Auth handle multi-tenant authentication across different subdomains or apps within a monorepo setup?
btw i read about your project in x a while ago, nice project!
I'm super happy that this is getting funding and won't become vaporeware at least for another season, because it's super important to have a stable foundation for homebrew solutions.
However I'm not entierly sold on this being an actual alternative to auth0 and such - at least for now. For a drop-in solution lack of mail and dashboard can be a real deal breaker.
Better-Auth has changed the game for authentication, developer experience and open source offerings as a whole. Huge fan of the framework agnostic approach. Congrats team!
It feels wrong in 2025 that Passkey support isn't up-front and first class and is relegated to a plugin.
Not many people are implementing passkeys yet, and we don’t want to force that on users. Also, the plugins we provide are still tightly integrated with the framework, you don’t even need to install a separate package, just import them.
If you want to make a case for tightly integrated plugins, then why aren't Passwords a plugin?
Also, there's a huge gap between "we don't want to force that on users" and "we don't advertise it in our top-level marketing site at all". I can't be the only HN reader that is evaluating all libraries like this for Passkey support. It took me four or five clicks to even realize this library even supported Passkeys at all. If I wasn't curious about other Plugins I probably would have dismissed this entire library as outdated for lacking even basic Passkey support.
nobody i know uses it. Talk with circles outside tech and ask them "how many passkeys they have". They will ask you what is a passkey
Passkey is weird to recognize as a "brand", especially for mainstream users. It's more interesting to ask the average/mainstream user how many sites and apps they login to with their Face or their Fingerprint, and the numbers there are shifting rapidly and in interesting ways. You'll get a bunch of "false positives" that think any interaction with the iOS or Android built-in password managers count, but those "false positives" are also what is lifting the tide of larger Passkey adoption. The users comfortable with native password managers are also the users getting the easiest auto-enroll paths into using passkeys in supported places.
At this point the chicken and egg onus is on websites to support Passkeys, and to do it as a first-class and recommended experience, not on explaining to average users what a passkey "is" or arguing over how many they have. It is past time for auth frameworks and vendors to start steering people away from passwords (and towards passkeys, whether you want to "brand it" as passkeys or not).
might be dumb q, but does it work well with Supabase Auth?
not at all dumb, i had same qtn. i assume its a direct replacement, and there should be some pros and cons, so what i'd really want is a knowledgeable person doing comparisons along the 4-5 major axes that people should really care about
axes i care about
0. does betterauth have google/twitter/github oauth? (i assume yes but hey its basic) 2fa support? Activedirectory/Okta/Workos/other team management level auth?
1. does betterauth integrate with postgres RLS? is there a better way to do the same job?
2. (pls autocomplete)
Curious to know why the default approach taken for auth is to use cookie sessions and not JWT, although it is available as plugin, its documentation is not clear.
Different space, but sounds like a similar launch approach to how Triplit works as a sync engine - open-sourced, can use for free, or can upgrade to pay for hosting and the console/dashboard view. Appreciate companies like this taking a developer-first approach
right, what other areas of SE are well suited for such a setup?
[dead]
Surprised none mentioned OpenAuth yet, how does this compares?
https://openauth.js.org/
If I use the commercial option what is the difference to a 3rd party solution ? It seems to me you would still have a 3rd party to offload Auth to?
The commercial offering is essentially a dashboard that connects directly to your existing setup and gives you a way to manage users and view analytics. You can also integrate additional services like bot and fraud protection as needed
The closest I can think of is Devise for Ruby on Rails ecosystem. While these solution provides great developer experience to get started, IMHO there are solid reasons to have separate identity providers like Auth0 or if you like to self-host, stuff like Keycloak, Dex and more. Consider your business logic backend need multi-region deployments, where will you keep the auth DB?
Personally, if I want my app to be future proof, I would probably keep auth as a separate service while speaking standard protocols like OAuth2 so that I can maintain single source of truth for my user identity and be able to build multiple applications based on it.
I can see the value of both approaches. (And I work for an auth provider, FusionAuth.) It's the age-old conflict between "use the best tool for the job" and "YAGNI".
There's something so simple about having a single deployment of code and auth wrapped up together, which is what the library approach offers. You can use the database to maintain integrity between your app's domain objects and your users. Everything needed for your app is in one place. I've seen this succeed and been part of teams doing this myself.
But auth/user management is usually the first thing extracted when you start to grow for a reason. Otherwise you end up with your main application serving as both its main purpose and as a user data store for other apps, or worse, you have siloed user data, multiple profiles and credentials for customers, and a worse user experience because your users have to log in to each app separately.
The extraction of this functionality is not as simple as moving other services typically, because of availability reqs and password hashes (not every provider supports every kind of hash, though I will say I wish more folks implemented something like FusionAuth's approach[0]). So that's an argument to just start with a separate service.
And, as you say, a single source of truth of user data for multiple applications has surprising benefits in the long run which counteract the additional complexity. Offering single sign-on across multiple apps[1] is a great feature with user benefits, if you have or plan to have multiple applications. Outsourcing auth to a specialized piece of software lets you focus on your app (once you've integrated, of course, nothing is free) and offer relatively undifferentiated features like MFA, passkeys, or SAML integrations with configuration rather than coding.
I guess the answer is "it depends", as always. I'd consider future plans, number of apps expected, features needed, cost structure, and more when making this decision.
[0]: https://fusionauth.io/docs/extend/code/password-hashes/custo...
[1]: if you and they use a standard like SAML or OIDC, you can even offer single sign-on for commercial off the shelf tools
I have been using Better Auth for a while now and it is awesome. Nicest auth DX I have come across
Congrats on getting into YC!
Welcome to the auth party! (Full disclosure, I work for FusionAuth, one of those third party auth providers.)
I feel like every ecosystem should have a great auth library, and am glad to see you taking on this challenge. I come from the ruby and java worlds where devise and spring auth are great choices, and have watched as several options have risen and fallen in the JS world (passport.js, nextauth). I've heard good things about your project from colleagues, so hopefully you'll win :).
Sounds like you plan to support this via infrastructure and higher level features. Any plans to offer paid support as well?
Anyway, congrats on your launch!
Appreciate the kind words :)) Yeah, it’ll mostly be high-level features. We do plan to offer paid support seems like there’s demand for it, and it helps give teams more confidence when choosing the library.
+1 to Dan's comment! Excited to see you guys inject some new life into our space.
congrats on the launch! better-auth is a joy to use. great dx with the type-safe plugin system.
the quality of the lib and the docs is really high, kinda crazy you just launched!
NextAuth certainly needs some competition. However, I wish better-auth didn't have so many dependencies. I feel like it shouldn't be necessary to depend on things like kysley and Typescript.
Sorry to hijack this post, but since people who know are likely to look here... Anyone know what's up with Next-Auth/Auth.js? The main author had a post up [1] stating that they would stop their involvement, but that post appears to have been removed.
[1] https://web.archive.org/web/20250419022421/https://balazsorb...
I don't have any details, but maybe this post from a few weeks later about his mental state is relevant? https://balazsorban.com/blog/depression-and-oss
I can't imagine the pressure of running a popular OSS project, even if you have support from a company to make it your full time job.
Are there any tests for this?
How do I know if this actually works in the long term?
I'm confused. What kind of long-term concerns do you have about this as opposed to any other library you're integrating into your application?
All *.test.ts files:
https://github.com/search?q=repo%3Abetter-auth%2Fbetter-auth...
Do you have any plans on launching a Swift framework?
Tangentially related, but have you thought about a go to market strategy related to AI?
I started a new side project with Cursor to see how it goes, and it suggests a lot of packages for a lot of things (often not even suggests, assume you want it and ask you to install already).
I imagine there will be a “AIO” AI optimization field soon. Have you considered at all?
I mean. If I explicitly ask Cursor models to use Better Auth for authentication, will any of them be able to use it?
A possible thing for you to work on could be to prepare a prompt with links to your documentation that I can copy and paste in Cursor (or whatever) and will successfully implement it in my project.
EDIT: If you want to give it a try at one now and post as a reply here, I’ll gladly try it. It should say to substitute Auth0, as I am already using it, in a NextJS 15 web app that uses Neon serverless Postgres as DB. But I can tweak those myself later too
Ideally assistants will look at your package.json then make web calls to bring in the docs. Maybe a README.AI file that is more token efficient can provide the data.
> I imagine there will be a “AIO” AI optimization field soon.
Please no.
Oh, it's coming :(.
The issue is similar to why folks use SEO--discoverability. Both qualitatively and anecdotally we (FusionAuth, my employer) have gotten a fair amount of traffic from GenAI sources.
Once you can get significant traffic, you must start optimizing for the traffic source, otherwise someone else will and you won't get the traffic/views/$$$.
how does the nextjs middleware works since it's impossible to open a db connection from it?
in rails there's authentication-zero.
I haven't found the equivalent in the jvm space.
nice work -- maybe I will do a port to jvm
This is great!
godspeed dudes.
Congrats on the launch of Better Auth! It's great to see a new framework aiming to make rolling your own auth in TypeScript easier. More well-thought-out options for developers in the authentication and authorization landscape are always welcome.
Best of luck with it!
(Disclosure: I'm a co-founder of Zitadel, also building solutions in this space.)
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Do people still use X25 these days? I thought everything would have moved to TCP/IP
Guess here X25 is the YC batch.
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Could you please review https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and stick to the site guidelines when posting here? Your account has already been breaking them repeatedly, e.g. here and https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44030798. We end up banning accounts that post like that, so please don't.
Btw there's no problem with what you were saying about the word fuck*. The problem is with the personal attack/abuse in your comment.
(We detached this comment from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44036364.)
* https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...
Which personal attack? You mean calling out americans? How is that personal? You also going to ban everyone here who posts disparaging generalizations about europeans? Because so far you haven't been.
As for
> Are you a shill, a troll or just an upset fanboy?
This is a genuine question, not an attack.
"Grow up", for starters.
> Are you a shill, a troll or just an upset fanboy?
That's a loaded question and easily enough to count as an attack. This is not a close call!
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Ok, since it seems clear that you don't want to use HN as intended, I've banned the account.
If you don't want to be banned, you're welcome to email hn@ycombinator.com and give us reason to believe that you'll follow the rules in the future. They're here: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html.
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