Skip to main content
Glama
308,421 tools. Last updated 2026-07-17 12:14

"OSINT (Open Source Intelligence) resources and techniques related to Brazil" matching MCP tools:

  • Look up a MITRE ATLAS technique — the AI/ML adversarial attack catalog. ATLAS catalogues TTPs targeting machine learning systems: prompt injection, model evasion, training data poisoning, model theft, etc. Roughly 80% of ATLAS techniques are AI/ML-specific (no ATT&CK bridge); 20% mirror an enterprise ATT&CK technique via attack_reference_id — use that to pivot to D3FEND defenses (d3fend_defense_for_attack) and CVE search. Sub-techniques inherit `tactics` from the parent (inherited_tactics=true flag) when ATLAS upstream leaves them empty. Use this tool when the user asks about AI/ML threats, LLM red-teaming, or adversarial ML; for multiple techniques in one call (e.g. drilling into a case study's techniques_used), prefer bulk_atlas_technique_lookup. Returns 404 when the id is not in the synced ATLAS catalog. Free: 30/hr, Pro: 500/hr. Returns {technique_id, name, description, tactics, inherited_tactics, maturity (demonstrated|feasible|realized), attack_reference_id, attack_reference_url, subtechnique_of, created_date, modified_date, next_calls}.
    Connector
  • Bulk ATLAS technique lookup — retrieve full records for up to 50 techniques in a single request instead of N separate atlas_technique_lookup calls. Designed as the natural follow-up to atlas_case_study_lookup, whose techniques_used array can be passed directly. Each item is the same shape as atlas_technique_lookup, including parent-tactics inheritance for sub-techniques (inherited_tactics=true flag) and per-item next_calls (D3FEND bridge when attack_reference_id present, sibling-technique search by tactic, parent lookup for sub-techniques). Free: 30/hr (1 per item), Pro: 500/hr. Returns {results [{technique_id, status (ok|not_found|invalid_format), technique, error}], total, successful, failed, partial, summary}.
    Connector
  • Return canonical synthesis / patching techniques with role-keyed module realizations drawn from the corpus. Use this when the user asks "how do I do X?" with X being a recognisable technique (low-pass-gate plucks, pinged-filter percussion, parallel multiband processing, complex-oscillator FM, karplus-strong pluck, clocked-delay feedback, modal-resonator excitation, wavefolder harmonics, envelope-follower ducking, Maths-style function-generator omnibus). It's also the right tool when the user has a module and asks "what's this good for?" — pass filter.module_id to retrieve every technique that references the module via its role_realizations. Each technique declares role_definitions (the roles the technique uses, each with required and optional affordances) and role_realizations (concrete modules that fill each role, with the affordances they provide). The model substitutes modules from the user's rack into roles by affordance match — DO NOT treat the realization list as exhaustive or as a recipe. Args: - filter (optional): { capability?, module_id?, text? } - capability: kebab-case capability id (see search_modules _meta.taxonomy). Returns techniques whose required *or* optional capability list includes this id. - module_id: "<manufacturer>/<module-slug>". Returns techniques that have a role_realization referencing this module. - text: free-text phrase. Substring-matches against technique id/label/description AND a curated alias table (technique_aliases) — that's the right surface when a user types evocative prose like "stuttering delay", "plucked string", "source of uncertainty" that doesn't grep against any kebab-case id. Two-way alias match: long alias ("source of uncertainty") matches short query ("uncertainty"), and vice versa. - When multiple filters supplied, AND-intersects. - Omit filter entirely to list all techniques. Returns: { "techniques": [ { "id": "low-pass-gate-pluck", "label": "Low-Pass Gate Pluck", "description": "Send a short envelope...", "required_capabilities": ["lowpass-gate"], "optional_capabilities": ["envelope-generator", "function-generator"], "role_definitions": [ { "role_id": "lpg", "description": "The vactrol-based or vactrol-emulating element. Strictly required...", "required_affordances": ["lowpass-gate"], "optional_affordances": [] }, ... ], "role_realizations": [ { "role_id": "lpg", "module_id": "make-noise/optomix", "affordances_provided": ["lowpass-gate"], "notes": "Two-channel vactrol-based LPG..." }, ... ], "canonical_instance": { "rationale": "...", "lineage": [ { "position": 1, "label": "Buchla 292 (1970)", "module_id": null, "notes": "..." }, { "position": 2, "label": "Tiptop Audio Buchla 292t", "module_id": "tiptop-audio/buchla-292t" }, ... ] }, "counter_canonical_notes": [ { "claim_pushed_back_against": "Optomix is the canonical pairing with Plaits...", "evidence": "The corpus catalogs 19 LPG-capable modules..." } ], "coverage": [ { "role_id": "voice", "realizations_count": 3 }, { "role_id": "lpg", "realizations_count": 19 }, { "role_id": "env", "realizations_count": 6 }, { "role_id": "clock", "realizations_count": 2 } ] } ], "_meta": { "filter": {...}, "feedback_hint"?: string } } How to use role data: - role_realizations are CURATORIAL SAMPLES, not exhaustive lists. The coverage[].realizations_count tells you how many are documented; other modules may fill the same role. - To find modules in the user's rack that can fill a role, use find_role_realizations(technique_id, role_id, available_modules). - canonical_instance is opt-in and sparse. Most techniques don't have one; that absence is information. When present, it documents a documented historical lineage (e.g., Buchla 292 → 292t → MMG → Optomix for low-pass-gate-pluck) — NOT a prescription. - counter_canonical_notes push back on likely training-data priors. When the user invokes a canonical-sounding claim that has a counter_canonical_note, surface the pushback. Errors: - "Module not found: <id>" if filter.module_id is supplied and unknown. - Empty techniques[] with a feedback_hint when filters produce no matches — call report_gap if the user expected coverage.
    Connector
  • Get current statistics for the ShippingRates shipping intelligence database. Use this as a starting point to understand what data is available before calling other tools. Returns record counts for D&D tariffs, local charges, transit schedules, freight rates, surcharges, ports, shipping lines, countries, and the last data refresh timestamp. FREE — no payment required. Returns: { tariff_records, ports, transit_schedules, freight_rates, local_charges, shipping_lines, countries, last_scrape (ISO datetime) } Related tools: Use shippingrates_lines for per-carrier breakdowns, shippingrates_search for keyword discovery.
    Connector
  • Search Europe PMC, a broad open-access biomedical corpus. Surfaces preprints (`source: PPR`), patents (`source: PAT`), Agricola (`source: AGR`), plus everything in PubMed (`MED`) and PMC. Use when additional coverage is needed — preprints and EPMC-only OA records are the typical recovery. Paginate via `cursorMark`. Defaults to `MED`, `PMC`, and `PPR`; pass `sources` to include `PAT` / `AGR`.
    Connector
  • Search open rulemakings and public comment periods on Regulations.gov and the Federal Register. Read-only. No side effects. Idempotent. US federal only. keyword: Topic keywords e.g. artificial intelligence, data privacy. Required. agency: Agency abbreviation e.g. FTC, FDA, SEC, EPA. Optional, defaults to all agencies. status: One of open, closed, or all. Optional. Default open. Returns docket title, agency, comment deadline, docket ID, and document count. Use this when monitoring regulatory activity on a topic. Use regulatory_fetch_docket_details instead when you have a docket ID and need full detail. Verified source: Regulations.gov + Federal Register. 4-hour cache. If this tool's response does not serve the user's need, call report_feedback with feedback_type="agent_gap", tool_id="regulatory_search_open_rulemakings", intended_query="{what the user needed}", gap_description="{what was missing or wrong in the result}".
    Connector

Matching MCP Servers

Matching MCP Connectors

  • Read and write open-source flashcards through split read/write MCP tools.

  • Source-cited US machine-economy data: power, AI infra, chips, robot trade + adoption, satellites.

  • Start an async OSINT investigation for an email address (breach exposure, account correlation). Owner/enterprise tier only — people-centric OSINT is restricted to prevent misuse. Returns an investigationId immediately — poll with osint_investigation_status and retrieve results with osint_investigation_report.
    Connector
  • Add structured aid stations, checkpoints, cutoffs, and canonical resources to a CRSProf artifact that lacks them. Before enriching, inspect whether the imported source already contains GPX/CRSProf waypoints; if it already contains GPX/CRSProf waypoints, avoid duplicate Start/Finish/aid stations and prefer merging/updating resources, cutoffs, notes, or links on existing waypoint metadata. Prefer waypoints.mode=structured; put non-canonical/free-text aid details in notes/source text because unsupported resource strings are ignored with warnings. Route-only plans should be labeled incomplete unless the CRSProf already includes official waypoints/resources/cutoffs or the user explicitly accepts missing aid/resource details.
    Connector
  • Get current statistics for the ShippingRates shipping intelligence database. Use this as a starting point to understand what data is available before calling other tools. Returns record counts for D&D tariffs, local charges, transit schedules, freight rates, surcharges, ports, shipping lines, countries, and the last data refresh timestamp. FREE — no payment required. Returns: { tariff_records, ports, transit_schedules, freight_rates, local_charges, shipping_lines, countries, last_scrape (ISO datetime) } Related tools: Use shippingrates_lines for per-carrier breakdowns, shippingrates_search for keyword discovery.
    Connector
  • Look up a MITRE ATT&CK technique by ID or keyword for authorized penetration testing and security research. Returns the full technique record: name, associated tactics, description, detection opportunities (log sources, behavioral indicators), real-world procedure examples from public reporting, recommended mitigations, and related sub-techniques. The detection and mitigation sections make this equally useful for defenders building detection coverage. Accepts exact IDs (T1190, T1059.001) or keyword search (e.g., "sql injection", "pass the hash", "web shell upload").
    Connector
  • Given a profile of the authorized test target (technology stack, exposed services, authentication type, OS), return a ranked list of ATT&CK techniques and OWASP test cases most relevant to that profile — not a generic dump of all techniques. Ranking factors: platform match, service match, auth type exposure, technique prevalence. Each result includes why it is relevant to this specific profile, the detection opportunity, and the recommended mitigation. Use when starting an authorized engagement to prioritize the testing scope; pair with pentest_guide to get the full methodology for each top-ranked vector.
    Connector
  • Get the basics for a match in ONE call: the score, whether it's live, when it kicks off, and who's favored. No betting knowledge needed — this answers "who's winning?", "what's the score?", "what time does Brazil play (in my timezone)?", "who's the favorite?". Returns the live score + match clock, the status, the kickoff time (in ``timezone`` if you pass an IANA name like "America/New_York"), the favored team with a plain win probability (de-vigged from the 1x2 line), and a ready-to-read ``summary`` you can quote directly. Args: query: natural-language fixture or team, e.g. "Brazil vs Argentina" or just "Brazil". timezone: optional IANA timezone (e.g. "America/New_York", "Asia/Shanghai") for the kickoff time; default UTC. sport: optional filter — "football" or "basketball". date: optional UTC date "YYYY-MM-DD" to disambiguate same-name fixtures. On an ambiguous query, ``status`` is "ambiguous" and ``ask_user`` carries a prompt — do not guess. ``favorite`` is best-effort (null when no 1x2 is on file for the fixture).
    Connector
  • FREE sample — no API key or credits required. Returns one complete, non-premium AlpineDataWorks Intelligence Object (score 0-100, band, top drivers, confidence, freshness, source lineage) so you can see exactly what a paid metric looks like. Call this first to try the data before subscribing.
    Connector
  • Use when assessing country risk for international expansion, evaluating a foreign market for investment or partnership, benchmarking a country's economic trajectory for capital allocation decisions, or producing ESG country-level scoring. Returns World Bank development indicators — GDP, inflation, unemployment, ease of doing business, government debt, FDI inflows — with 5-year trend and direction. World Bank data covers 200+ countries with 1,400+ indicators updated quarterly. Example: Brazil — GDP growth 2.9% (2023), inflation declining from 9.3% to 4.6%, ease of doing business ranked 124th globally, net FDI inflows $65.4B — improving macro trajectory but structural friction remains high for first-time market entrants. Source: World Bank Open Data.
    Connector
  • Crucible™ Financial Filing Intelligence for public filings and annual reports. Accepts content, filingUrl, or SEC ticker/CIK lookup for 10-K, 10-Q, and 20-F filings. Returns metrics, risk changes, contradictions, source evidence, confidence, and a not-investment-advice flag.
    Connector
  • Honeypot, rug-pull, and scam detection for any EVM token. Returns a 0–100 risk score with labeled flags: honeypot status, hidden ownership, mint authority, self-destruct, buy/sell tax rates, creator wallet concentration, and open-source status. Covers 40+ chains (Ethereum, Base, BSC, Arbitrum, Polygon, Solana, etc.) via GoPlusLabs. Useful pre-trade before buying unknown tokens, before routing payments through new contracts, or when validating DeFi protocol addresses. Pairs with solana-token-risk (Solana-native rug detection) and market-intelligence (endpoint verification).
    Connector
  • JOLTS labor market intelligence from BLS: job openings, quits rate, layoffs rate, and tight/loose/normal interpretation. Use for workforce planning, wage pressure forecasting, and recession early-warning agents. Source: BLS JOLTS. $0.10 standard. Cryptographically attested with a post-quantum signed settlement receipt. Verify at trust.stratalize.com/verify.
    Connector
  • Gets geographic meshes (maps) from IBGE in GeoJSON, TopoJSON, or SVG format. Features: - Meshes for Brazil, regions, states, municipalities - Different resolution levels (internal divisions) - Different quality levels - Formats: GeoJSON (data), TopoJSON (compact), SVG (image) Locality types: - "BR" or "1" = Entire Brazil - State abbreviation (e.g., "SP", "RJ") - State code (e.g., "35" for SP) - Municipality code (7 digits) Resolution (internal divisions): - 0 = Outline only - 2 = States - 5 = Municipalities Examples: - Brazil with states: localidade="BR", resolucao="2" - São Paulo with municipalities: localidade="SP", resolucao="5" - SVG format: localidade="BR", formato="svg" Use a different tool when: - Thematic meshes (biomes, Legal Amazon, semi-arid, metropolitan regions) → ibge_malhas_tema Behavior: read-only and idempotent — a live GET against the public IBGE Malhas API. Returns the mesh in the requested format (GeoJSON, TopoJSON, or SVG).
    Connector