Use natural language to manage Taiga projects and create user stories.
The provided materials are very limited; based on the description, this MCP tool appears to be a standard integration with the Taiga project management system, but it does not specify authentication, actual remote endpoints, or local data scope. Given the positive evidence that it is open source and auditable, the overall posture is better classified as caution rather than high risk.
The materials state there are no keys/environment variables, but a tool that lists projects, views details, and creates user stories would typically require some form of Taiga authentication. The documentation does not explain credential source, storage, or scope, creating an information gap, but there is no explicit red flag of credential abuse.
By its stated function, the tool is expected to send project and user-story-related data to a Taiga service. However, the materials list remote endpoints as 'none' and do not identify the actual Taiga host(s) or whether they are configurable, so the egress target and scope are unclear. Based on known facts, this looks like routine external service communication but the endpoints should be verified.
The system checks indicate it executes code; this means it runs as a local process, which is a normal capability for this type of MCP service. The materials do not show it requesting system privileges beyond its stated function, so there is not enough evidence to classify this as high risk.
The description only mentions reading and creating Taiga project data and does not claim broad local file access. However, with no README, it is not possible to confirm whether it caches, logs, or reads local config/session data. There is no evidence of overbroad access, but the data-access boundary is unclear.
The project has an open-source repository, making the code theoretically auditable, which is a clear risk-reducing factor. However, it comes from a third-party registry, has no declared license, shows 0 stars, and has unknown maintenance status, so trust and ongoing maintenance signals are weak; caution is appropriate for supply chain.
Copy the install command and let the AI configure it · recommended for beginners
No copy-paste install info for "Taiga MCP Server" yet — see the docs or source repo.
List all Taiga projects I can access and sort them by most recently updated.
A project list with key details such as names and latest update times.
Open the Taiga project "Mobile App Redesign" and summarize its status, members, and recently active user stories.
A project overview including status, team members, and a summary of recently active items.
Create a user story in the Taiga project "Website Optimization": As a visitor, I want the homepage to load faster so I can browse content smoothly. Set the priority to high.
A new user story is created, with its title, description, priority, and creation result returned.
Access Taiga UI docs, code examples, and migration guides for development
Connect AI to GitHub via MCP for repository management and developer workflows.
Access Tiger Cloud services, databases, and docs for development and operations.
Query TargetProcess projects, stories, bugs, and sprints in natural language.
Query, create, and manage Targetprocess work items with natural language.
Manage Linear issues, projects, and teams through MCP-powered AI workflows.