AI tool comparison
AI-SPM vs Superpowers
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Developer Tools
AI-SPM
Open-source runtime security control plane for AI agents in production
50%
Panel ship
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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.
Developer Tools
Superpowers
Mandatory workflow skills that keep coding agents on track for hours
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Superpowers is an open-source collection of composable "skills" — structured workflow files — that guide coding agents like Claude Code and Cursor through disciplined software development. Where most agentic coding setups let the model improvise, Superpowers enforces a mandatory sequence: clarify requirements, design, plan into 2-5 minute tasks, execute with TDD, review. Skills are "mandatory workflows, not suggestions." With over 152,000 GitHub stars and climbing fast, Superpowers has become a reference implementation for the growing "how do you keep your agent from going off the rails" problem. The framework implements RED-GREEN-REFACTOR test cycles, forces complexity reduction at each step, and builds in checkpoints where the human reviews before the agent continues. The result is agents that can work autonomously for hours without drifting. The timing is right: as Claude Code, Codex CLI, and Cursor all become more powerful, the bottleneck is shifting from "can the model write code" to "can I trust it to work autonomously without blowing up my codebase." Superpowers is a direct answer to that, and the star count suggests developers are starving for it.
Reviewer scorecard
“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.”
“This is the missing layer between 'give Claude Code your repo' and 'actually ship production code.' The 2-5 minute task decomposition forces the model to stay focused, and the built-in TDD cycles catch regressions before they stack up. The 152k stars aren't hype — developers have a genuine need for this structure.”
“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.”
“Superpowers is fighting the last war. It adds structure on top of today's agents, but the next generation of models will be better at self-managing their own workflows. You're also adding significant token overhead with all these structured skill files — which means real money for heavy users. Evaluate whether the discipline is worth the cost.”
“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.”
“What Superpowers really is: a crystallization of best practices for human-agent collaboration. Even if future models internalize these patterns, the framework documents what 'good' looks like. This is how the field learns — open source repositories that encode hard-won workflow knowledge that later gets baked into models.”
“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.”
“Even as a non-developer, the idea of an agent that asks clarifying questions before charging ahead, then shows you the design for approval, then executes in small reviewable steps — that's the collaboration model I wish every AI tool used. The structure makes the output trustworthy, not just impressive.”
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