For double-blind peer review

Share the code,
not the author.

Anonymous GitHub makes a read-only mirror of your repository or pull request with every trace of identity removed — so you can attach a link to your submission without breaking anonymity.

Before · your repo github.com/jane-smith/DeepLearnUtils
# DeepLearnUtils
Developed by Jane Smith at MIT CSAIL.
See Smith et al., “Attention That Works,” 2026.
Contact: jane.smith@mit.edu
After · anonymous mirror anonymous.4open.science/r/paper-7f2a
# DeepLearnUtils
Developed by Jane Smith at MIT CSAIL.
See Smith et al., “Attention That Works,” 2026.
Contact: jane.smith@mit.edu
{{stat.nbRepositories | number}}
repositories anonymized
{{stat.nbUsers | number}}
researchers
{{stat.nbPageViews | number}}
page views
How it works

Three steps,
about a minute.

01
Authenticate
Sign in with GitHub to access your dashboard. We ask for read-only access to the repositories you pick — nothing else.
02
Configure
Point us at a repo, branch, commit, or pull request. List the terms to redact (names, affiliation, emails). Set an expiry.
03
Share
You get a stable link with a randomised slug. Reviewers browse, diff, and download — never seeing who you are.
Trusted by the community
Used by authors submitting to major software-engineering and systems venues.
ICSE
International Conference on Software Engineering
FSE
Foundations of Software Engineering
OOPSLA
Object-Oriented Programming, Systems, Languages, and Applications

Double-anonymous

Anonymize your GitHub repository with options to remove links, images, or specific terms. Keep full control — set an expiration date to make your repository unavailable after review.

Anonymize form

Explorer

Reviewers can browse your repository with highlighted source code, rendered PDFs, images, and notebooks. GitHub Pages is also supported.

Repository explorer

Manage

Monitor views, edit configuration, remove or update your repository — all from a clean dashboard.

Dashboard