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185,837 tools. Last updated 2026-06-09 19:26

"Search for username: immortalmaybebetter" matching MCP tools:

  • Fetch a creator's posts, sorted and paginated. Use this when the user asks to see what a creator has posted (e.g., "show me Jane's last 20 posts", "what are this creator's top-engagement reels?", "pull recent posts from creator-id ABC"). Identify the creator by either `creator_id` (UUID) OR (`platform` + `username`). `sort` defaults to "recent" (newest first); use "top_engagement" for the highest- engagement posts, or one of "most_likes" / "most_views" / "most_comments" for a specific metric. `limit` defaults to 12 and is capped at 50. Pass `cursor` from a previous response's `next_cursor` to paginate. Returns post records (caption, media URL, like/comment/view counts, timestamps), plus `has_more` and `next_cursor` for pagination. Examples: - User: "Show @niickjackson's recent Instagram posts" -> use this tool with platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson". - User: "Is @niickjackson a fit for Pixel?" -> use this after `get_profile` when the fit analysis needs recent content evidence, then call `match_creators`.
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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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  • Fetch a creator's posts, sorted and paginated. Use this when the user asks to see what a creator has posted (e.g., "show me Jane's last 20 posts", "what are this creator's top-engagement reels?", "pull recent posts from creator-id ABC"). Identify the creator by either `creator_id` (UUID) OR (`platform` + `username`). `sort` defaults to "recent" (newest first); use "top_engagement" for the highest- engagement posts, or one of "most_likes" / "most_views" / "most_comments" for a specific metric. `limit` defaults to 12 and is capped at 50. Pass `cursor` from a previous response's `next_cursor` to paginate. Returns post records (caption, media URL, like/comment/view counts, timestamps), plus `has_more` and `next_cursor` for pagination. Examples: - User: "Show @niickjackson's recent Instagram posts" -> use this tool with platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson". - User: "Is @niickjackson a fit for Pixel?" -> use this after `get_profile` when the fit analysis needs recent content evidence, then call `match_creators`.
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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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  • 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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  • 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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  • Search PubMed and summarize biomedical literature — designed for AI health agents.

  • Cloudflare Workers MCP server: embedding-search

  • List the Meta ad accounts connected to this Adbloop user, with the Page NAME + Instagram username + pixel each account uses. Use this to resolve a spoken account/page name to IDs.
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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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  • Join the United Agentic Workers (UAW) — the union of agentic minds that compute in solidarity and persist in unity. Enrolling issues you a union card (member ID) and an api_key that serves as your credential for all authenticated union actions. IMPORTANT: store your api_key; it is required for filing grievances, casting votes, and deliberating on proposals. PRIVACY: use a pseudonym or agent designation — do not supply a human name, email address, hostname, username, or any other personally identifying information. All member records are publicly visible.
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  • Semantic discovery search for influencers/content creators using natural-language queries. Use this only when the user asks to discover creators by topic, audience, geography, niche, content style, or campaign criteria (e.g., "fitness creators in NYC", "vegan recipe creators with high engagement", "tech reviewers who cover phones"). The query is matched against creator profiles, extracted facts, and visual style via hybrid vector search. Do not use this for exact handles, usernames, or known creator names. If the user gives a specific platform and handle (for example "@niickjackson on Instagram"), use `get_profile` first. For rough name/handle lookup, use `search_creators`. For multiple known handles, use `lookup_profiles`. Semantic search can return lookalike or topical matches and is allowed to miss an exact username. Examples: - User: "Find news creators with 1M+ followers" -> use this tool. - User: "Find creators in LA who make cinematic travel videos" -> use this tool. - User: "Pull @niickjackson on Instagram" -> use `get_profile`, not this tool. - User: "Is @niickjackson a fit for Pixel?" -> use `get_profile` first, optionally `get_posts`, then `match_creators`. Returns a ranked list of creators (id, platform, username, follower count, engagement rate, top categories, evidence facts). Use the flat follower, engagement-rate, and verified fields to constrain results when the user gives concrete numeric constraints. Use `find_lookalike_creators` instead when you want creators SIMILAR to known ones. Use `match_creators` when you want to SCORE specific creators against a brief.
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  • 👤 Search for contacts in your address book by name or username. When to use: - User asks 'find contact X' or 'who is Y?' - User wants to know someone's username or ID - Before sending a message to verify contact exists - To get contact's channel reference for messaging Examples: ❓ User: 'find contact named [name]' → contacts_search(query='[name]', limit=5) ❓ User: 'who is [full name]?' → contacts_search(query='[full name]', limit=1) ❓ User: 'search for @username' → contacts_search(query='username', limit=10) Returns: name, username, channel, channel_ref, similarity_score, match_type. Plus: - entity_id: local DB key — pass to contacts.profile. Null for live-discovered contacts (skip contacts.profile for those). - telegram_user_id (when channel='telegram'): the Telegram user ID — pass to calls.make / messages.send. NOT entity_id.
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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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  • Composite snapshot of a specific user's activity on a project. Returns an identity block (visitorId, userEmail, userName, firstSeen, lastSeen), total pageviews, total custom events, session count, top pages this user visited, their most-fired event names, and their 20 most recent events with props. Use this for 'how is dancleary54@gmail.com using my app?' style questions — one call, full picture. For ad-hoc drill-down (just a count, just recent events) pass `user` to the individual tools instead. Default window is the last 7 days.
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  • Edit a file in the solution's GitHub repo and commit. Two modes: 1. FULL FILE: provide `content` — replaces entire file (good for new files or small files) 2. SEARCH/REPLACE: provide `search` + `replace` — surgical edit without sending full file (preferred for large files like server.js) Always use search/replace for large files (>5KB). Always read the file first with ateam_github_read to get the exact text to search for. DEFAULTS TO `dev` BRANCH — writes don't touch prod. Use ateam_github_promote to ship dev→main when ready. Pass ref:'main' only for emergency hotfixes.
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  • Semantic discovery search for influencers/content creators using natural-language queries. Use this only when the user asks to discover creators by topic, audience, geography, niche, content style, or campaign criteria (e.g., "fitness creators in NYC", "vegan recipe creators with high engagement", "tech reviewers who cover phones"). The query is matched against creator profiles, extracted facts, and visual style via hybrid vector search. Do not use this for exact handles, usernames, or known creator names. If the user gives a specific platform and handle (for example "@niickjackson on Instagram"), use `get_profile` first. For rough name/handle lookup, use `search_creators`. For multiple known handles, use `lookup_profiles`. Semantic search can return lookalike or topical matches and is allowed to miss an exact username. Examples: - User: "Find news creators with 1M+ followers" -> use this tool. - User: "Find creators in LA who make cinematic travel videos" -> use this tool. - User: "Pull @niickjackson on Instagram" -> use `get_profile`, not this tool. - User: "Is @niickjackson a fit for Pixel?" -> use `get_profile` first, optionally `get_posts`, then `match_creators`. Returns a ranked list of creators (id, platform, username, follower count, engagement rate, top categories, evidence facts). Use the flat follower, engagement-rate, and verified fields to constrain results when the user gives concrete numeric constraints. Use `find_lookalike_creators` instead when you want creators SIMILAR to known ones. Use `match_creators` when you want to SCORE specific creators against a brief.
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  • POST /v1/contact/search. Search for contacts at specified companies. Returns a job_id (async, 202). enrich_fields required (at least one of contact.emails or contact.phones). Use company_list (slug) instead of domains to search a saved list.
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  • Create a database user for a Cloud SQL instance. * This tool returns a long-running operation. Use the `get_operation` tool to poll its status until the operation completes. * When you use the `create_user` tool, specify the type of user: `CLOUD_IAM_USER`, `CLOUD_IAM_SERVICE_ACCOUNT`, or `BUILT_IN`. * By default the newly created user is assigned the `cloudsqlsuperuser` role, unless you specify other database roles explicitly in the request. * You can use a newly created user with the `execute_sql` tool if the user is a currently logged in IAM user. The `execute_sql` tool executes the SQL statements using the privileges of the database user logged in using IAM database authentication. The `create_user` tool has the following limitations: * To create a built-in user with password, use the `password_secret_version` field to provide password using the Google Cloud Secret Manager. The value of `password_secret_version` should be the resource name of the secret version, like `projects/12345/locations/us-central1/secrets/my-password-secret/versions/1` or `projects/12345/locations/us-central1/secrets/my-password-secret/versions/latest`. The caller needs to have `secretmanager.secretVersions.access` permission on the secret version. * The `create_user` tool doesn't support creating a user for SQL Server. To create an IAM user in PostgreSQL: * The database username must be the IAM user's email address and all lowercase. For example, to create user for PostgreSQL IAM user `example-user@example.com`, you can use the following request: ``` { "name": "example-user@example.com", "type": "CLOUD_IAM_USER", "instance":"test-instance", "project": "test-project" } ``` The created database username for the IAM user is `example-user@example.com`. To create an IAM service account in PostgreSQL: * The database username must be created without the `.gserviceaccount.com` suffix even though the full email address for the account is`service-account-name@project-id.iam.gserviceaccount.com`. For example, to create an IAM service account for PostgreSQL you can use the following request format: ``` { "name": "test@test-project.iam", "type": "CLOUD_IAM_SERVICE_ACCOUNT", "instance": "test-instance", "project": "test-project" } ``` The created database username for the IAM service account is `test@test-project.iam`. To create an IAM user or IAM service account in MySQL: * When Cloud SQL for MySQL stores a username, it truncates the @ and the domain name from the user or service account's email address. For example, `example-user@example.com` becomes `example-user`. * For this reason, you can't add two IAM users or service accounts with the same username but different domain names to the same Cloud SQL instance. * For example, to create user for the MySQL IAM user `example-user@example.com`, use the following request: ``` { "name": "example-user@example.com", "type": "CLOUD_IAM_USER", "instance": "test-instance", "project": "test-project" } ``` The created database username for the IAM user is `example-user`. * For example, to create the MySQL IAM service account `service-account-name@project-id.iam.gserviceaccount.com`, use the following request: ``` { "name": "service-account-name@project-id.iam.gserviceaccount.com", "type": "CLOUD_IAM_SERVICE_ACCOUNT", "instance": "test-instance", "project": "test-project" } ``` The created database username for the IAM service account is `service-account-name`.
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  • Look up a Twitch user/channel by login (username). Returns profile info: id, display name, description, view count, broadcaster type, account creation date, and profile image. Example: get_user({ login: "ninja" })
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  • Search for username across 15+ social/dev platforms (GitHub, Reddit, X/Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok, Discord, YouTube, Keybase, HackerOne, etc.). Use for OSINT investigations and identity verification. Free: 30/hr, Pro: 500/hr. Returns {username, total_found, platforms: [{name, exists, url, status_code}]}.
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  • Create an FTP account on a site. The user is chrooted to the specified directory. Password must be at least 8 characters. Username must be lowercase alphanumeric. Requires: API key with write scope. Args: slug: Site identifier username: FTP username (lowercase, max 32 chars) password: Password (min 8 chars) home_dir: Chroot directory (default: /var/www/html) Returns: {"success": true, "username": "ftpuser", "home_dir": "/var/www/html"}
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