When you connect Basecamp to Huddle, you're granting access to all projects and Basecamps associated with your account in a single authorization step. This works similarly to Asana and ClickUp's authorization model.
Basecamp uses a user-level OAuth authorization model. When you click "Connect Basecamp" and sign in through Basecamp's authorization screen, you're granting Huddle permission to act on your behalf across your entire Basecamp account.
This means:
Some platforms like Linear and Monday.com use workspace-level authorization, where you explicitly select which workspace to connect during the OAuth flow. If you belong to multiple workspaces on those platforms, you may need to authorize each one separately.
Basecamp behaves more like Asana and ClickUp in this regard—the authorization is tied to your user identity rather than individual accounts, so a single connection gives Huddle visibility into all your Basecamp work across every account where you're a member.
Basecamp organizes work differently than other platforms. Instead of workspaces containing projects, you may belong to multiple "Basecamps" (separate accounts), each containing its own projects. Your single OAuth connection covers all of these Basecamps and their projects.
After authorization, Huddle can retrieve your to-dos, projects, and account information from any Basecamp where you're a member. We only pull the data needed to display your tasks in your Huddle dashboard.
You can disconnect Basecamp from Huddle at any time in your account settings. You can also revoke Huddle's access directly from Basecamp under My Profile → My Devices & Apps → Third-party Apps.