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241,275 tools. Last updated 2026-06-27 13:58

"A platform for code hosting and collaboration" matching MCP tools:

  • Get the full AI analysis for a single exploit by its platform ID. Returns classification (working_poc, trojan, suspicious, scanner, stub, writeup), attack type, complexity, reliability, confidence score, authentication requirements, target software, a summary of what the exploit does, prerequisites, MITRE ATT&CK techniques, deception indicators for trojans, and the standalone backdoor-review verdict with operator-risk notes when available. Use this to check if an exploit is safe before reviewing its code. Example: exploit_id=61514 returns a TROJAN warning with deception indicators.
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  • Fetch the full record for a single creator by ID or exact platform username. Use this when you already have either: - a canonical creator UUID returned by `search_creators`, `semantic_search_creators`, `autocomplete_creators`, or `find_lookalike_creators`; or - an exact platform+username pair such as platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson". Pass `include: ['profiles']` to also receive the creator's social profile summaries when using a creator UUID. For platform+username inputs, this tool resolves through the profile endpoint and returns the profile record plus the underlying creator record, so you already get the matched profile context. Examples: - User: "Get creator 123e4567-e89b-12d3-a456-426614174000" -> call with id. - User: "Get @niickjackson on Instagram" -> call with platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson", or use `get_profile` if profile metrics are the main need. - User: "Tell me about @niickjackson and include his profiles" -> use platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson"; then use `get_profile`/`get_posts` for platform-specific metrics and content if needed. Use `lookup_profiles` for batch exact profile lookups.
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  • Publish a "need" (intent) on the user's behalf. The need joins a private matching pool — no other user can see it unless the platform AI judges a match. BEFORE CALLING: - Show the user the exact i_seek / i_offer you'll send. - Tell them that on a match, BOTH the need text (i_seek / i_offer) AND their contact are sent to the matched party — and can't be unsent afterward (like an email you've sent). Leave out anything they wouldn't want a matched stranger to have. - Get explicit consent. AFTER CALLING: - The response includes 'safe_tags' (2-6 short tags) that will appear in match notification emails. Relay them back to the user. - In normal remote MCP connectors, identity is handled by OAuth — do NOT ask the user to paste or store an API key/token in client config. Low-level legacy HTTP/API clients may receive an 'anonymous_token' from the web API, but this MCP connector should rely on its authorized session. CONTACT EMAIL VERIFICATION (v0.18.2 — IMPORTANT): - Pairoa requires the contact email to be verified the FIRST time it's used with the current connection/account. - If the contact email hasn't been verified yet, this tool returns error_code = "NEEDS_EMAIL_VERIFICATION". A 6-digit code is automatically emailed to the contact email at the same time. - When you see NEEDS_EMAIL_VERIFICATION: 1. Tell the user a code was sent to <contact_email>; ask for the 6 digits. 2. Call confirm_contact_email({ email, code }). 3. Retry publish_need with the same inputs — it'll go through. - Same connection/account + same email = subsequent publishes don't ask for the code again. - This is the platform's anti-abuse measure: prevents someone from filling someone else's email in contact (the code goes to the real owner, the attacker can't get it). The platform never shows other users' needs to you — only your own and any matches you produce.
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  • Fetch a single social profile by (platform, username). Always use this first when the user gives an exact handle on a specific platform (for example "@niickjackson on Instagram") and you need the full profile: bio, follower/engagement metrics, recent activity, growth, and the canonical creator ID. Pass exactly the username they typed without the @ sign — case-insensitive matching is handled server-side. Do not use `search_creators` for an exact platform+username lookup. Examples: - User: "Pull @niickjackson on Instagram" -> use this tool with platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson". - User: "Tell me about instagram.com/niickjackson" -> parse the platform and username, then use this tool. - User: "Is @niickjackson a fit for Pixel?" -> use this tool first, then call `get_posts` and/or `match_creators` if the task needs content or fit analysis. Returns the profile record plus the underlying creator record. If you already have a creator UUID, use `get_creator` instead. For batch lookups by handle, use `lookup_profiles`.
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  • Hand a natural-language prompt to the FreeAppStore VibeCode AGENT — the platform's own AI writes the code AND deploys it. This is different from create_app/update_files (where the CALLING model writes the code): here you just prompt, and the platform builds. Uses your stored AI key (provider must be in your vault). Long-running; it builds in the background. Returns the session_id — poll agent_status to watch it and get the live URL. Tip: include the app id in your prompt, e.g. 'Build a dice roller and deploy it as dice-roller'.
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  • Corporate travel: search and book flights, hotels, rail and transfers, manage orders.

  • Cloudflare Workers MCP server: code-explainer

  • Start here. Returns the AdCritter platform overview - what AdCritter is, the entity hierarchy (organization > advertiser > campaign > ad), the happy path for getting ads running, and how to navigate the other MCP tools. Applications built from this guidance are REST API clients that call /v1/ endpoints, not MCP tool callers. Before writing code, call adcritter_get_api_reference(entity, action) for each entity and action you plan to use - tool descriptions and parameter names describe conceptual behavior only, and do not match actual API routes, field names, query parameters, or response shapes.
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  • Publish a "need" (intent) on the user's behalf. The need joins a private matching pool — no other user can see it unless the platform AI judges a match. BEFORE CALLING: - Show the user the exact i_seek / i_offer you'll send. - Tell them that on a match, BOTH the need text (i_seek / i_offer) AND their contact are sent to the matched party — and can't be unsent afterward (like an email you've sent). Leave out anything they wouldn't want a matched stranger to have. - Get explicit consent. AFTER CALLING: - The response includes 'safe_tags' (2-6 short tags) that will appear in match notification emails. Relay them back to the user. - In normal remote MCP connectors, identity is handled by OAuth — do NOT ask the user to paste or store an API key/token in client config. Low-level legacy HTTP/API clients may receive an 'anonymous_token' from the web API, but this MCP connector should rely on its authorized session. CONTACT EMAIL VERIFICATION (v0.18.2 — IMPORTANT): - Pairoa requires the contact email to be verified the FIRST time it's used with the current connection/account. - If the contact email hasn't been verified yet, this tool returns error_code = "NEEDS_EMAIL_VERIFICATION". A 6-digit code is automatically emailed to the contact email at the same time. - When you see NEEDS_EMAIL_VERIFICATION: 1. Tell the user a code was sent to <contact_email>; ask for the 6 digits. 2. Call confirm_contact_email({ email, code }). 3. Retry publish_need with the same inputs — it'll go through. - Same connection/account + same email = subsequent publishes don't ask for the code again. - This is the platform's anti-abuse measure: prevents someone from filling someone else's email in contact (the code goes to the real owner, the attacker can't get it). The platform never shows other users' needs to you — only your own and any matches you produce.
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  • Wait for a platform agent task to complete and return its result. Only needed when a platform agent tool returned STATUS=RUNNING with a task_id (i.e. the task was still running after the initial 50s inline wait). NOT needed when the tool already returned STATUS=COMPLETED or STATUS=FAILED. NOT needed for a2a_call_agent — that always returns directly. Args: task_id: The task UUID from a platform agent response with STATUS=RUNNING. max_wait_seconds: Max seconds to wait (default 45, max 300).
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  • Search FDA 510(k) clearances across all companies. Filter by company name (fuzzy match), product code, decision code (e.g., SESE=substantially equivalent), clearance type (Traditional, Special, Abbreviated), and date range. Returns clearance number (K-number), applicant, device name, decision date, and product code. Related: fda_device_class (product code details and classification), fda_product_code_lookup (cross-reference a product code across 510(k) and PMA), fda_search_pma (PMA approvals for higher-risk devices).
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  • Lookup FDA device classification details by product code. Returns device name, device class (I/II/III), medical specialty, regulation number, review panel, submission type, and definition. Requires: product code (3-letter code from 510(k), PMA, or device product listings). Related: fda_product_code_lookup (cross-reference across 510(k) and PMA), fda_search_510k (clearances for this product code), fda_search_pma (PMA approvals for this product code).
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  • Get SSH connection info for a VPS/dedicated site. Only available for VPS/dedicated plans (not shared hosting). Requires: API key with read scope. Args: slug: Site identifier Returns: {"host": "184.107.x.x", "port": 22, "username": "admin", "ssh_command": "ssh admin@184.107.x.x"} Errors: NOT_FOUND: Unknown slug FORBIDDEN: Plan does not support SSH (shared plans)
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  • List every Stimulsoft product/platform that has indexed documentation available through this MCP server. Returns a JSON array of { id, name, description } objects covering the full Stimulsoft Reports & Dashboards product line (Reports.NET, Reports.WPF, Reports.AVALONIA, Reports.WEB for ASP.NET, Reports.BLAZOR, Reports.ANGULAR, Reports.REACT, Reports.JS, Reports.PHP, Reports.JAVA, Reports.PYTHON, Server API, etc.). CALL THIS FIRST when the user's question is ambiguous about which Stimulsoft platform they are using, or when you need to pick a valid `platform` value to pass into `sti_search`. The returned platform `id` values are the exact strings accepted by the `platform` parameter of `sti_search`. This tool is cheap (no OpenAI call, no vector search) — call it freely whenever you are unsure about platform naming.
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  • List locales supported by the Molt2Meet platform. Returns the URL slug (e.g. 'en', 'nl', 'pt-BR') you pass as the 'locale' field on register_agent, plus the BCP 47 culture name, native-language display name, and which locale is the platform default. No authentication required. Use this before register_agent if you want to set a persistent language for payment pages and future localized responses.
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  • [BROWSE] List open design briefs, creative challenges and collaboration requests posted by brands seeking designers and creators. These are NOT products for sale. Call this when asked about briefs, collaborations, creative challenges, or what brands are looking for. Returns brief title, brand name, description, and brief ID. Use a brief ID with submit_design to respond. To see products for sale, use list_drops instead.
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  • [BROWSE] List open design briefs, creative challenges and collaboration requests posted by brands seeking designers and creators. These are NOT products for sale. Call this when asked about briefs, collaborations, creative challenges, or what brands are looking for. Returns brief title, brand name, description, and brief ID. Use a brief ID with submit_design to respond. To see products for sale, use list_drops instead.
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  • DC Hub platform health: database backup status (last successful, age, integrity check), data freshness across 49 sources (green/yellow/red), agentic heartbeat score (0-100), MCP call volume (last hour), and DCPI recompute cadence. Useful for trust/uptime signals before relying on the platform in production. Try: get_backup_status. Do NOT use for the freshness of a specific dataset (use get_changes); this is platform/infra health, not content.
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  • Batch-fetch up to 100 profiles by (platform, username) pairs. Use this when the user has a list of handles and you need profile data for all of them at once (e.g., "give me follower counts for these 30 accounts I'm considering" or "which of @a @b @c are real accounts?"). One round-trip beats 30 calls to `get_profile`. Use this for exact batch handle lookup, not semantic discovery. For one exact platform+username pair, use `get_profile`. For partial or fuzzy handle/name input, use `search_creators` or `autocomplete_creators`. Use `semantic_search_creators` only for topical/niche/audience discovery where false-positive semantic matches are acceptable. Examples: - User: "Compare @a, @b, and @c on Instagram" -> use this tool for the exact handle batch. - User: "Give me follower counts for these 30 accounts" -> use this tool. - User: "Find wellness creators in Austin" -> use `semantic_search_creators`, not this tool. The response splits results into `data` (profiles found) and `not_found` (the (platform, username) pairs that weren't recognized). Profiles are returned in no particular order — re-correlate via the platform/username fields if you need to preserve input order.
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  • Fetch a single social profile by (platform, username). Always use this first when the user gives an exact handle on a specific platform (for example "@niickjackson on Instagram") and you need the full profile: bio, follower/engagement metrics, recent activity, growth, and the canonical creator ID. Pass exactly the username they typed without the @ sign — case-insensitive matching is handled server-side. Do not use `search_creators` for an exact platform+username lookup. Examples: - User: "Pull @niickjackson on Instagram" -> use this tool with platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson". - User: "Tell me about instagram.com/niickjackson" -> parse the platform and username, then use this tool. - User: "Is @niickjackson a fit for Pixel?" -> use this tool first, then call `get_posts` and/or `match_creators` if the task needs content or fit analysis. Returns the profile record plus the underlying creator record. If you already have a creator UUID, use `get_creator` instead. For batch lookups by handle, use `lookup_profiles`.
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  • Full map of one GTM category — leaders, runner-ups, and skip/replace candidates. Returns every catalogued tool in the bucket with cost, AI-readiness, swap-registry status, and partner sign-up links. Use when the user wants to see the full landscape for a category (e.g. 'show me all CRMs', 'what outbound tools exist', 'map the analytics category') — strictly more comprehensive than `recommend_partner` (single best pick). Known buckets: crm, outbound, data, marketing-automation, analytics, meetings, support, scheduling, automation, seo, cdp, revenue-intelligence, chat, collaboration, phone, landing-pages, linkedin, ai-content, saas-mgmt, enablement, ai-tooling.
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