> clay-security-basics

Apply Clay security best practices for API keys, webhook secrets, and data access control. Use when securing Clay integrations, rotating API keys, auditing access, or implementing webhook authentication. Trigger with phrases like "clay security", "clay secrets", "secure clay", "clay API key security", "clay webhook security".

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SKILL.mdclay-security-basics

Clay Security Basics

Overview

Security best practices for Clay integrations covering API key management, webhook endpoint security, provider credential isolation, and lead data protection. Clay handles sensitive PII (emails, phone numbers, LinkedIn profiles) at scale, making security critical.

Prerequisites

  • Clay account with admin access
  • Understanding of environment variables and secrets management
  • Access to deployment platform's secrets manager

Instructions

Step 1: Secure API Key Storage

# .env (NEVER commit to git)
CLAY_API_KEY=clay_ent_your_api_key_here
CLAY_WEBHOOK_URL=https://app.clay.com/api/v1/webhooks/your-id

# .gitignore — add these patterns
.env
.env.local
.env.*.local
*.key

For production, use your platform's secrets manager:

# GitHub Actions
gh secret set CLAY_API_KEY --body "clay_ent_your_key"

# Google Cloud Secret Manager
echo -n "clay_ent_your_key" | gcloud secrets create clay-api-key --data-file=-

# AWS Secrets Manager
aws secretsmanager create-secret \
  --name clay/api-key \
  --secret-string "clay_ent_your_key"

Step 2: Authenticate Incoming Webhook Callbacks

When Clay's HTTP API columns call your endpoint, validate the request origin:

// src/middleware/clay-auth.ts
import crypto from 'crypto';

const CLAY_WEBHOOK_SECRET = process.env.CLAY_WEBHOOK_SECRET!;

function verifyClayCallback(
  payload: string,
  signature: string | undefined
): boolean {
  if (!signature || !CLAY_WEBHOOK_SECRET) return false;

  const expected = crypto
    .createHmac('sha256', CLAY_WEBHOOK_SECRET)
    .update(payload)
    .digest('hex');

  return crypto.timingSafeEqual(
    Buffer.from(signature, 'hex'),
    Buffer.from(expected, 'hex')
  );
}

// Express middleware
function clayAuthMiddleware(req: any, res: any, next: any) {
  const signature = req.headers['x-clay-signature'] as string;
  const rawBody = JSON.stringify(req.body);

  if (!verifyClayCallback(rawBody, signature)) {
    console.warn('Rejected unauthorized Clay callback from', req.ip);
    return res.status(401).json({ error: 'Invalid signature' });
  }
  next();
}

Step 3: Isolate Provider API Keys

Connect provider keys directly in Clay (Settings > Connections) rather than passing them through your application. This keeps provider credentials out of your codebase:

ProviderWhere to Store KeyWhy
ApolloClay Settings > Connections0 credits when using own key
ClearbitClay Settings > Connections0 credits when using own key
Hunter.ioClay Settings > Connections0 credits when using own key
HubSpotClay Settings > ConnectionsCRM sync uses Clay's OAuth
SalesforceClay Settings > ConnectionsCRM sync uses Clay's OAuth

Step 4: API Key Rotation Procedure

# 1. Generate new key in Clay Settings > API
# 2. Update all integrations with new key
# 3. Test connectivity
curl -s -X POST "https://api.clay.com/v1/people/enrich" \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer $NEW_CLAY_API_KEY" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"email": "test@example.com"}' | jq .status

# 4. Once confirmed working, revoke old key in Clay dashboard
# 5. Update deployment secrets
gh secret set CLAY_API_KEY --body "$NEW_CLAY_API_KEY"

Step 5: Protect Enriched Lead Data

// src/clay/data-protection.ts
const PII_FIELDS = ['email', 'phone', 'personal_email', 'home_address', 'linkedin_url'];

/** Strip PII from enriched data before logging or analytics */
function redactPII(row: Record<string, unknown>): Record<string, unknown> {
  const redacted = { ...row };
  for (const field of PII_FIELDS) {
    if (field in redacted) {
      redacted[field] = '[REDACTED]';
    }
  }
  return redacted;
}

/** Hash email for deduplication without storing plaintext */
function hashEmail(email: string): string {
  return crypto.createHash('sha256').update(email.toLowerCase().trim()).digest('hex');
}

// Usage: log enriched data safely
console.log('Enriched:', redactPII(enrichedRow));

Step 6: Security Checklist

  • API keys stored in environment variables or secrets manager
  • .env files in .gitignore
  • Webhook callback endpoints validate request signatures
  • Provider API keys connected in Clay UI (not in application code)
  • API key rotation procedure documented and tested
  • Enriched PII data redacted in application logs
  • Clay workspace uses separate API keys per integration
  • Least privilege: viewers can't run enrichments or export data
  • No hardcoded Clay URLs or keys in source code
  • git-secrets or similar scanning enabled in CI

Error Handling

Security IssueDetectionMitigation
API key in git historygit log -p --all -S 'clay_ent_'Rotate key immediately, use BFG to scrub
Unauthorized webhook callsMissing signature validationAdd HMAC verification middleware
Over-permissioned usersViewers running enrichmentsAudit roles in Settings > Members
PII in application logsgrep logs for email patternsAdd PII redaction to log pipeline

Resources

Next Steps

For production deployment, see clay-prod-checklist.

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