Competitive intelligence
Track Stripe: GitHub, npm & hiring signals
Sigmon monitors Stripe across 27 of 27 public signal sources and turns the movement into a weekly strategic brief — what changed, why it matters, and what to do this week. Below is what we actually detect right now.
Stripe
Top repositories
- stripe/stripe-node4.4k
- stripe/stripe-php4.0k
- stripe/stripe-go2.6k
- stripe/stripe-ios2.5k
- stripe/stripe-ruby2.1k
npm packages
- @stripe/react-stripe-js6.7M/wk
- @stripe/stripe-react-native373.4k/wk
- @stripe/terminal-js132.7k/wk
27 of 27 signal sources track Stripe
Each lights up only when its prerequisite signal exists — so this count is real coverage, not inflated.
Leading indicators, before the news cycle
Sigmon surfaces what Stripe is about to do — SEC Form D funding filings, senior-role hiring surges, README positioning pivots, certificate-transparency staging spikes, release velocity changes — so you read the move before it hits Hacker News.
Track Stripe — free, in 60 seconds
See exactly what Sigmon catches for Stripe before the news cycle — funding filings, hiring shifts, README pivots, release velocity. One weekly strategic brief, no scraping.
Also track
Frequently asked questions
- Is tracking Stripe on Sigmon free?
- Yes. Sigmon's free tier monitors Stripe's GitHub, npm, releases and pricing and sends a weekly strategic brief of what changed — no credit card required.
- What does Sigmon track for Stripe?
- Stripe's public footprint: GitHub stars and release cadence, npm downloads, hiring signals, Hacker News and community mentions, pricing-page changes, and new subdomains from certificate-transparency logs — 27 of 27 signal sources for Stripe. Currently showing 4.4k GitHub stars and 6.7M weekly npm downloads.
- How often is Stripe's data updated?
- Signals are collected daily and summarized into one weekly brief, so you see meaningful moves without daily noise.
- Where does Sigmon get Stripe's data?
- Only public sources — GitHub, npm, Hacker News, public job boards, SEC EDGAR and certificate-transparency logs. No scraping behind logins and nothing that violates a site's terms.