Kodezi is the code reliability infrastructure for modern software. An autonomous operating system for codebases that acts as an AI CTO to maintain, heal, and evolve your system.
This is the 4th launch from Kodezi. View more

Kodezi
Launching today
Kodezi is the code reliability infrastructure for modern software.
An autonomous operating system for codebases that acts as an AI CTO to maintain, heal, and evolve your system.









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Launch tags:Pitch NYC
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Kodezi
Hey Product Hunt,
Ishraq here, founder of Kodezi.
Four years ago, while I was still in high school, I launched the first version of Kodezi here on Product Hunt. It started with a simple question: why doesn’t autocorrect exist for code?
Since then, we’ve raised over $2M, built and shipped multiple products, and grown to millions of developers. Over the last 6+ years, we’ve stayed focused on one problem: code reliability.
Along the way, one thing became clear. Writing code is no longer the bottleneck. Maintaining it is. Codebases decay, bugs reach production, and engineers end up spending most of their time fixing instead of building.
Today, we’re launching the next chapter of Kodezi as part of the Deel pitch competition.
Kodezi is Code Reliability Infrastructure for modern engineering teams. We automatically detect, fix, and prevent issues across production codebases, taking responsibility for outcomes, not just suggesting fixes. It understands your entire codebase, works in real time, and continuously improves code health as it runs.
Our perspective is simple. Everyone is building the autopilot for code. We’re building the mechanic shop. Because no matter how advanced code generation gets, systems will fail. Today, that responsibility falls entirely on engineers. We’re building the system that takes that burden on.
Launching here again feels full circle. Kodezi started on Product Hunt as a high school experiment. Today, it has grown into infrastructure for real production environments.
Our vision is a world where you never push a bug again. Developers shouldn’t be maintainers. They should be builders.
Excited to share this with the same community where it all began, and would love your feedback.
Ishraq from Kodezi