A package you rely on gets abandoned. A third-party API you call announces a sunset date buried in a changelog. Usually you find out when a build breaks or a call starts returning errors. Deprely watches the deprecation, abandonment and sunset signals across your stack and emails your team one short, plain-English heads-up — while there's still time to plan the migration.
First alerts planned for autumn 2026. Waitlist members get first access — no spam, one email when we open.
node-sass is deprecated — maintainers recommend moving to sass (Dart Sass)sassEvery alert arrives as a short email like this one — nothing to install, no dashboard to remember to check.
The languages and package managers you use, and the third-party APIs you build on. A short description is enough to start.
Deprely tracks deprecation and abandonment flags from the major package registries, and published sunset notices from the APIs you depend on.
When something you rely on is deprecated, abandoned or scheduled for sunset, you get a short email: what it is, why, and the recommended path forward.
At launch we watch: deprecation and abandonment signals published by the major package registries (npm, PyPI, RubyGems, Packagist and others), and sunset notices published for the third-party APIs you tell us you depend on. We translate those into one plain email. We don't claim to see every package or every API — we watch the signals that are actually published, and we'll be clear about what's in scope as we open.
We're not a vulnerability scanner. Tools like Dependabot and Socket.dev flag known security issues — and cover parts of the dependency picture for free. Deprely's job is the quieter risk they're not built for: the dependency that's been quietly abandoned, or the API with a sunset date you didn't see coming.
Deprely opens to a first group in autumn 2026. Join the waitlist and you'll get one email when it's your turn — nothing else.