Interact with ATProto and Bluesky for identity, profiles, and social discovery.
The materials are sparse, but the tool appears focused on interacting with the AT Protocol/Bluesky ecosystem and does not declare required secrets or fixed remote endpoints. Overall, it looks like a third-party open-source tool with typical network and code-execution capabilities; no clear high-risk red flags are evident, but limited documentation and low source maturity warrant caution.
The materials explicitly state that no keys or environment variables are required, and there is no stated need for API keys, tokens, or local sensitive credentials; based on available information, credential exposure appears low.
The description indicates interaction with the AT Protocol/Bluesky ecosystem for identity, profiles, and social discovery, which typically implies sending queries or user input to related network services. Although no specific hosts are declared, this is expected network behavior for such a tool, but the target endpoints and data scope are not transparent in the materials.
The system flags this tool as executes-code, meaning it runs server-side code/processes locally. The provided materials do not show system privileges beyond what is typical for an MCP server, and no suspicious privilege escalation is described, so this is caution rather than high risk.
From the description, it mainly handles identity, profile, and social discovery data, and it does not declare broad local file read/write permissions; however, as a locally running MCP service, it may theoretically access session input or tool-call data, and the access boundaries are not clearly defined in the materials.
There is a public open-source repository, which is a positive factor because the source can in principle be audited; however, the source is from a third-party registry, the README is absent, the license is unspecified, community adoption is 0 stars, and maintenance status is unknown, indicating weak supply-chain maturity and maintenance signals.
Copy the install command and let the AI configure it · recommended for beginners
No copy-paste install info for "ATProto MCP Server" yet — see the docs or source repo.
Using the ATProto MCP Server, look up the Bluesky user @example.bsky.social and return their DID, public profile, avatar, bio, and linked URLs in a short summary.
A concise summary of the user's identity record and public profile details for quick review.
Use the ATProto network to find notable Bluesky accounts related to AI product design, then group them by niche, bio, and why they are worth following.
A categorized list of relevant accounts to support industry research or social discovery.
Use the ATProto MCP Server to research an organization's public social presence on Bluesky, including profile details, related account signals, and visible interaction patterns, then provide a brief analysis.
A structured research summary and brief observations about the organization's public social presence.
Let AI access and operate AT Protocol and Bluesky through natural language.
Connect AI agents to Bluesky for search, posting, engagement, and chat management.
Enable AI agents to search and manage interactions on Bluesky.
Connect to the mcp API via MCP to extend AI tool capabilities.
Search, read, and safely publish Bluesky content from any MCP client.
Connect Confluence and Jira to query docs, issues, and project work.