How to Detect Sensitive Data in Your Clipboard
You copy credit card numbers to fill out forms. You paste API keys between terminals. You copy SSH private keys from password managers. All of it ends up in your clipboard history — and stays there until you remember to delete it.
Option 1: The Hard Way (Manual)
- 1 Remember every time you copy something sensitive.
- 2 Manually find and delete it from your clipboard manager.
- 3 Hope you didn't miss any. (You did.)
Option 2: The Sane Way (SaneClip)
- ✓ Auto-Detection: SaneClip scans every copied item for credit cards (Luhn validation), SSNs, API keys (OpenAI, AWS, GitHub, Slack, Stripe, Google), passwords, SSH keys, and PGP keys.
- ✓ Visual Flagging: Sensitive items are marked with a warning badge so you can spot them instantly in your history.
- ✓ Auto-Purge: Set a timer — 1 minute, 5 minutes, or 1 hour — and sensitive items delete themselves automatically. No manual cleanup ever.