By Max Techera · Open-source (MIT) · Updated June 2026
ChatGPT artifacts
Share ChatGPT artifacts on your own domain
ChatGPT has no native way to publish what it makes as a private link on your own domain. Hushdrop turns any ChatGPT artifact into a private link on your own domain — encrypted in your browser, open-source, free.
ChatGPT and Canvas generate HTML pages, docs, dashboards, and small apps. But handing it to someone as a real, shareable link you control is the missing step — Hushdrop is that step.
How to share a ChatGPT artifact
Add the Hushdrop connector in ChatGPT (Settings → Connectors → https://hushdrop.dev/mcp), then ask it to “publish this as a link.” No CLI. For a private, password-protected link on your own domain, paste the HTML into the browser uploader or run npx hushdrop file.html.
1
Drop it
hush file.html — or a PDF, markdown, image, or any file — from your terminal or any AI agent.
2
Branded & encrypted
Your logo, OG card, and badge are baked in, then it's AES-256 encrypted client-side behind your unlock gate.
3
Live on your domain
Uploaded to your Vercel Blob and served at yourdomain.com/slug. URL + password on your clipboard.
FAQ
Is it really open-source and self-hosted?
Yes — MIT licensed, and it runs on your own Vercel Blob + domain. No third party ever holds your content (it's encrypted client-side) or controls your URL.
Is it zero-knowledge?
Locked drops are AES-256 encrypted in the browser via StatiCrypt before upload. The server stores only ciphertext — never your content or password.
Does it work with any AI agent?
Yes. It's a CLI plus a SKILL.md and an MCP server, so Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, OpenCode, Gemini CLI — anything that runs a shell or speaks MCP — can use it.
Your AI's work shouldn't die in a chat.
Open-source, zero-knowledge, free. Try it in one command: