Compare/AI-SPM vs Linear AI Project Planner

AI tool comparison

AI-SPM vs Linear AI Project Planner

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

A

Developer Tools

AI-SPM

Open-source runtime security control plane for AI agents in production

Mixed

50%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

AI-SPM (AI Security Posture Management) is an open-source control plane for AI agent security in production environments. Built by indie developer dshapi and posted to Hacker News, it addresses a real gap: most LLM systems now have tool access and decision-making power, but almost no runtime oversight layer to catch when things go wrong. The system works as a gateway between your application and the LLM, enforcing three main controls: prompt injection detection (including obfuscated variants that bypass naive pattern matching), structured tool call validation against defined policies using Open Policy Agent (OPA), and sensitive data leakage prevention (PII and model output filtering). An Apache Kafka and Apache Flink streaming pipeline provides real-time audit trails and anomaly detection. The creator's key insight is that tool misuse — not model jailbreaks — is the primary risk vector in production AI agents. A rogue or compromised agent that escalates tool permissions or exfiltrates data through sanctioned channels is far harder to catch than a classic prompt injection. AI-SPM is early, minimal traction, and needs real-world stress testing. But as AI agent deployments mature from demos to production, runtime security tooling like this becomes non-optional.

L

Developer Tools

Linear AI Project Planner

Paste a spec, get issues, estimates, and a dependency graph instantly

Ship

100%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Linear's AI Project Planner takes a product spec or brief and automatically decomposes it into structured issues with estimates, then generates an interactive dependency graph — all inside your existing Linear workspace. It integrates directly with Linear's data model, meaning generated issues follow your team's existing labels, cycles, and project conventions. This is an AI feature layered into an established project management product rather than a standalone tool.

Decision
AI-SPM
Linear AI Project Planner
Panel verdict
Mixed · 2 ship / 2 skip
Ship · 4 ship / 0 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Open Source
Included in Linear's existing plans: Free (up to 250 issues), Plus $8/seat/mo, Business $16/seat/mo
Best for
Open-source runtime security control plane for AI agents in production
Paste a spec, get issues, estimates, and a dependency graph instantly
Category
Developer Tools
Developer Tools

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

The OPA-based policy enforcement for tool calls is exactly the kind of control plane enterprises need before deploying agents in production. This is early but points in the right direction. If you're building agents with database or API access, you need something like this or you're flying blind.

78/100 · ship

The primitive here is spec-to-issue decomposition with topological dependency ordering — and unlike most AI planning tools, it lands directly into the existing data model instead of exporting a CSV you then have to re-enter by hand. The DX bet is zero-new-surface: if you already use Linear, the generated issues obey your team's labels, assignee rules, and cycle cadence, which is the right call. The moment of truth is whether the dependency graph survives contact with a real spec that has ambiguous ordering — from the demo, it handles straightforward CRUD-style feature trees well but I'd want to see it on a spec with cross-team platform dependencies before I trust it on anything critical. Still, this is genuinely not replicable with three API calls in a Lambda — the tight integration with Linear's graph model is the actual work.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

One developer, one HN post, minimal engagement. The Kafka + Flink stack for a security gateway seems like significant over-engineering for most teams. And the creator openly admits that pattern-based injection detection is easily bypassed — so the core feature has known weaknesses. Not production-ready.

72/100 · ship

The direct competitor is Notion AI with project templates plus every ClickUp AI planning feature, both of which produce floating documents that you then manually translate into actual tracked work — Linear's version skips that translation step and that gap is real. The scenario where this breaks: any team whose projects require cross-workspace dependencies, external stakeholders, or non-Linear tooling in the critical path; the dependency graph becomes a partial fiction the moment half your blockers live in Jira or GitHub Issues. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Linear itself, because this feature becomes table stakes and the question becomes whether the underlying planning quality is good enough to keep users from reverting to manual breakdown after the first embarrassing misestimate.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

AI agent security is a category in its own right that barely existed a year ago. Every week there's a new story about an agent doing something unintended in production. AI-SPM is an early but important stake in the ground for what a mature runtime security layer for agentic systems should look like.

75/100 · ship

The thesis here is falsifiable: by 2028, project planning is not a human-authored artifact but a continuously inferred structure derived from specs, code history, and team velocity — and the team that owns the graph owns the workflow. Linear is riding the trend of AI collapsing the distance between intent and execution, and they are on-time, not early; GitHub Copilot Workspace and Atlassian Intelligence are already staking adjacent claims. The second-order effect that matters isn't faster planning — it's that if the dependency graph is auto-generated and auto-updated, project managers stop being the people who maintain the plan and start being the people who adjudicate AI-generated plans, which is a meaningful power shift inside engineering orgs. The bet only fails if model-generated decompositions turn out to be systematically wrong in ways that erode trust faster than iteration improves them.

Creator
45/100 · skip

This is deeply infrastructure-layer stuff that doesn't touch my workflow at all. Important for the ecosystem but not something I'd evaluate or deploy.

No panel take
PM
No panel take
80/100 · ship

The job-to-be-done is unambiguous: turn a product spec into a tracked, ordered, estimated work breakdown without a two-hour planning meeting — and for teams already in Linear, this does that job in one pass. Onboarding is effectively zero because there's no new product to adopt; the AI surfaces inside the existing create-project flow, which means time-to-value is measured in seconds if you have a spec ready to paste. The opinion baked into this product is that the AI should generate a complete starting state rather than asking clarifying questions, and that's the right call — the worst thing a planning tool can do is add more decisions to a flow meant to reduce them. The gap is estimate calibration: generated estimates are flat defaults unless the AI can learn from your team's historical velocity, and I'd want to see that feedback loop close before calling this complete.

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