markdy.com presents itself as an open-source animation DSL, a tool for developers to write animations as easily as Markdown. The idea is promising, and the site itself looks polished with custom branding and fast hosting. But when you dig into who's behind it, the trail goes cold. There's no about page, no team names, no social media accounts, and no way to contact anyone. That's a red flag for a project asking developers to install its code into their own applications.
For a software library, trust is everything. Most legitimate open-source projects at least list a GitHub profile, a maintainer's name, or a community Discord. markdy.com has none of that. The domain is also very young β registered just two months ago β which means it hasn't had time to build a reputation. While the technology described sounds real and the code examples look functional, the lack of transparency makes it hard to distinguish a genuine project from a fly-by-night operation. If you're considering using markdy in a project, start by testing it in an isolated environment. Look for official package registries (npm) and check those maintainer profiles independently. Until the team behind it steps into the light, treat markdy.com like an unverified open-source project: interesting, but not something you'd bet your production code on.