Plausible Analytics
GoatCounter
Plausible Analytics | GoatCounter | |
---|---|---|
331 | 70 | |
22,910 | 5,031 | |
1.5% | 2.2% | |
9.8 | 9.4 | |
about 7 hours ago | 3 days ago | |
Elixir | Go | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Plausible Analytics
- How to Incapacitate Google Tag Manager and Why You Should (2022)
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Your Guide To Using Open Source Software as an Indie Developer
There was a time when open source software meant “functional, but clunky.” That’s changed. Tools like Plausible (analytics), N8N (automation), Umami (web stats), and Vaultwarden (password manager) are beautifully built, stable, and powerful. Many match or even beat their commercial alternatives.
- Open source Google Analytics replacement
- Plausible 3.0.0
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10 of the Best Web Analytics Tools for React Websites
Plausible is a privacy-focused website analytics tool that provides simple, actionable insights into website traffic and visitor behavior. It prioritizes data privacy by offering transparent analytics without cookies, tracking scripts, or personal data collection.
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Top 10 European Open-Source Projects to Watch in 2025
Perfect for companies running under tight EU privacy regulations. Find more: Plausible analytics
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Meet Marko Saric, Co-founder of Privacy-friendly Plausible Analytics
In this interview, Marko Saric shared his thoughts on privacy and running a bootstrapped SaaS business. Plausible integration is already available in Open SaaS as a privacy-friendly alternative to Google Analytics. We hope this interview helps you understand the value of such a product, and the nature of running an open source business.
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5 Side Project Ideas for Developers to Monetize as Micro-SaaS in 2025
Plausible Analytics (https://plausible.io/) is a lightweight, privacy-focused analytics tool that’s designed to be simple and easy to use. Unlike Google Analytics, Plausible gives you just the metrics you need—without the bloat.
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Telescope – an open-source web-based log viewer for logs stored in ClickHouse
Would this also work with something like Plausible (https://github.com/plausible/analytics) which uses ClickHouse to store web analytics data, or it primarily for log data?
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Umami is a simple, fast, privacy-focused alternative to Google Analytics
I've actually had this discussion with Plausible directly back in 2022[1], and more recently with the lawyer they had write a blog post on the topic[2]. I wrote an article on it, that was recently discussed here on HN [3].
The response from Plausible is essentially "we've checked with legal council, and stand by the statement". The conversation with the lawyer started out well, but he stopped responding when I asked about the ePD, not GDPR.
There generally seems to be a lot of confusion, even in legal circles, about what ePD requires informed consent for. Many think that only PII requires consent, or think that anonymization bypasses it. That amount of confusion makes it very easy for a layman (e.g. Plausible) to find _someone_ willing to back up their viewpoint.
The EDPB released a guideline in 2023 that explicitly states that what Plausible et al. are doing is covered by the ePD's consent requirement, but that doesn't mean that any of the companies offering it are interested in saying it out loud.
1: https://github.com/plausible/analytics/discussions/1963
GoatCounter
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Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (April 2025)
Location: Ireland (Galway)
Remote: yes
Willing to relocate: yes
Technologies: Go ("Golang"), Python, Ruby, JavaScript, Linux, Unix, PostgreSQL
Résumé/CV: https://www.arp242.net/cv/cv-martintournoij
Email: [email protected]
I've been using Go as my primary language for the last seven years, although I don't overly care about the specific language and have experience with a wide variety of tools and languages such as Python, Ruby, PHP, C, JavaScript, Lua, and probably some more. While I've mainly focused on backend in the last few years, I also have written plenty of frontend code over the years, from the "pre-jQuery" days to VueJS.
In the last few years I mainly focused on GoatCounter (https://www.goatcounter.com) with the occasional contract job, but I'm keen to start working on something new for the longer term.
I've got quite a bit of code on my GitHub, so you can take a look at that if you want: https://github.com/arp242/
- Ask HN: What do you use for analytics for a statically generated website?
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Umami is a simple, fast, privacy-focused alternative to Google Analytics
Related, shoutout to Goatcounter - https://www.goatcounter.com/
It's an incredibly bare-bones analytics tracker, but it's free and cloud-hosted which were the two things I was most looking for in an alternative to GA.
I run a website that gets about ~300k pageviews/month. Vercel was eating my wallet alive with their analytics offering. All I wanted with my tracker was to feel motivated by knowing that traffic was going up and to the right. I didn't want to pay hundreds a month for that and I didn't want to manage my own server just to have analytics. Goatcounter addressed my needs well!
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Show HN: Vince – A self hosted alternative to Google Analytics
> Both maxmind and db-ip free versions of city data miss city geo id values, rendering city data useless for many cases.
I work for IPinfo.
I think you might find my conversation with Goatcounter's dev interesting: https://github.com/arp242/goatcounter/issues/765
I pitched him to use our free country database because of MaxMind's EULA issues. MaxMind does not permit distribution of the database and requires end users to use their own token. Moreover, they actually charge thousands of dollars when you distribute the "free" database with a commercial intent.
Now, we have a free IP to Country database that we offer under a straight CC-BY-SA 4.0 license without an EULA. It is free, comes with daily updates, has full accuracy, and you can even commercially redistribute the database (via providing us an attribution).
I understand we do not have a free city database to offer, nor is our database lightweight because we have full accuracy. But you can check it out if you are interested. We do have a version with ASN (ISP) information as well.
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Ask HN: Which analytics platform do you use?
If you're looking for something simple, GoatCounter is a good option. I've used it for several years now and have been happy.
https://www.goatcounter.com/
- Goatcounter has stopped working due to expired certificate
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Plausible Analytics: GDPR Compliance with O Cookie Consent Banner
Obligatory GoatCounter plug: https://www.goatcounter.com
It's also cookieless, the hosted version is free to use within reason, and it's extremely lightweight if you choose to self-host it. A good fit for smaller sites.
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Create an Astro blog from scratch
Add analytics to your website (for ex: GoatCounter – open source web analytics)
- Show HN: Shareable Analytics for public stats. Customize sections and themes
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A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev
GoatCounter — GoatCounter is an open-source web analytics platform available as a hosted service (free for non-commercial use) or self-hosted app. It aims to offer easy-to-use and meaningful privacy-friendly web analytics as an alternative to Google Analytics or Matomo. The free tier is for non-commercial use and includes unlimited sites, six months of data retention, and 100k pageviews/month.
What are some alternatives?
ctop - Top-like interface for container metrics
Fathom Analytics - Fathom Lite. Simple, privacy-focused website analytics. Built with Golang & Preact.
Umami - Umami is a modern, privacy-focused alternative to Google Analytics.
PostHog - 🦔 PostHog provides open-source web & product analytics, session recording, feature flagging and A/B testing that you can self-host. Get started - free.
GoAccess - GoAccess is a real-time web log analyzer and interactive viewer that runs in a terminal in *nix systems or through your browser.