u/hasdata_com

HasData scraping APIs, no-code tools, MCP server, and CLI for easy work with data

HasData scraping APIs, no-code tools, MCP server, and CLI for easy work with data

HasData is a web data platform. You get scraping APIs (Google SERP, Amazon, Zillow, Google Maps, Indeed, Instagram, and more), no-code scrapers, an MCP server for AI clients, a CLI for shell and agent workflows, and agent skills for coding assistants.

Who is it for: Developers doing SERP tracking, lead enrichment, price monitoring, real estate data, or any workflow that needs reliable structured data from the web. Also for teams using AI agents. Our MCP server wires real-time web data directly into Claude Desktop, Cursor, Windsurf, and similar tools.

Why it stands out: Our median latency keeps at ~1.5s. Everything runs on self-hosted Kubernetes. We run synthetic tests on every API multiple times per day. Each endpoint gets hit with 10+ parameter variations, results validate individual response fields, alerts go to Slack before customers see anything. 47 APIs, 21 no-code scrapers, self-managed infra.

Link: https://hasdata.com

One more thing. Today we are launching at Product Hunt, so we will be happy to read you thoughts about things we do.

https://preview.redd.it/767ykx295a1h1.png?width=1704&format=png&auto=webp&s=4478b1fae83d0ea288431af23de3b2e2c8706e7d

reddit.com
u/hasdata_com — 7 days ago
▲ 12 r/DigitalProductSellers+4 crossposts

We spent years building our scraping infrastructure and today we launch on Product Hunt

We spent years heads-down building HasData, and today's the day we go live on Product Hunt. Before we find out how it goes, wanted to share where we actually landed.

40+ APIs, 20+ no-code scrapers, an MCP server, an AI agent, a CLI, and agent skills. That's the product surface.

Under the hood: Node handles backend logic and parsing (libxml). All outbound traffic runs through a Go-based proxy service we built ourselves. TLS fingerprinting, multiplexing across multiple proxy providers plus our own dedicated pools, connection management. This keeps median response time at ~1.5s.

Everything runs on a self-managed, self-hosted RKE2 cluster. We run synthetic tests several times per day, each API gets hit with at least 10 parameter variations. For Google SERP, a healthy response for `q=coffee` should have 7+ organic results, a knowledge graph, a local pack, related questions, pagination and we validate each block individually. If something breaks, Slack gets it before any customer does.

Today we find out if all that actually matters to people outside our team. Interesting what your launch days looked like.

Here is our PH page, if you want to support us and all the work we did: https://www.producthunt.com/posts/hasdata

u/hasdata_com — 6 days ago
▲ 1 r/SaaS

Launching on Product Hunt tomorrow. What actually caught you off guard on launch day?

We launch on Product Hunt tomorrow. We built a data scraping SaaS with 47 APIs, no-code scrapers, MCP server, CLI, self-hosted infra. Not going to pitch it here.

What I want to know: what was the thing you didn't prepare for? Not the full checklist, page looks good, team knows what to do. The thing that actually hit you sideways. Bad timing, a community reaction you didn't expect, something technical, something psychological. Whatever it was.

reddit.com
u/hasdata_com — 9 days ago
▲ 1 r/mcp

We built a remote MCP server that lets Claude Desktop, Cursor, or any MCP client access web data without browser automation.

Instead of opening pages and parsing HTML, you just call tools and get structured JSON back.

You can do things like:

  • Google Search, Maps, News, Trends
  • Amazon products and reviews
  • Airbnb, Zillow, Redfin listings
  • Instagram, Yelp, YellowPages
  • or scrape any page with structured output

There are 40 tools total.

Endpoint: https://mcp.hasdata.com/api/mcp
Docs: https://docs.hasdata.com/mcp-server

Setup is simple, just point your MCP client to the endpoint and pass your API key in headers.

If you try it, we would like to hear what you use it for or what’s missing.

reddit.com
u/hasdata_com — 24 days ago