AI Built Your Website. Now Who's Checking It?
You built a website with Claude Code over a long weekend. Friday it didn't exist. Sunday night, fifty real people have signed up. It works.
By RiskMeter
You can't read what it's made of. That's not a flaw in the plan — it's the plan. But it leaves a quieter question: who's checking?
The AI built you a working site. Working is not the same as safe, and the AI won't bring up the difference.
A scan is how you look at the site without learning to read what it's made of. You don't need a developer reading the code. You need someone testing the site from the outside in, the way a hacker could.
And you need it more than once, because every prompt is a renovation. A protection that was there in March can quietly disappear in April when you ask the AI to redesign the homepage.
What scans usually find on AI-built sites.
- Customer lists easier to read from the outside than they should be
- Passwords and keys baked into the part of the site visitors download
- Sign-up forms that don't notice when a bot tries ten thousand times
- Admin pages and old test versions still online from the site you've since forgotten
These are real liabilities. All are findable from outside, by someone who knows where to look.
If you'd rather have someone look, that's what we do.
RiskMeter scans small-business websites — including ones built end-to-end with AI — and writes the report in language you can read.