Manage Ghost blog posts directly from AI coding editors and workflows.
The materials are sparse, but the description indicates a local MCP tool that manages Ghost blogs and likely sends post content to Ghost instances. Open-source MIT licensing is a positive sign, but missing documentation, zero stars, and unknown maintenance keep the overall posture at caution.
The material explicitly states that no keys or environment variables are required, and no API tokens, account passwords, or other highly sensitive credentials are disclosed as needed. Based on the available information, credential exposure appears low, though the lack of documentation means users should still verify whether any undisclosed authentication is actually required at install time.
Although the metadata lists no remote host, the stated functions—creating, publishing, and syncing Ghost blog posts—normally imply sending post content to a target Ghost site or its API. Such network egress is consistent with the declared purpose and is a standard capability for this class of tool, but the current material does not document the exact endpoints, data scope, or connection method.
The system flags this tool as executes-code, meaning it runs locally as an MCP service and executes code/processes. This is a normal capability for MCP tools; the available material does not show requests for system privileges clearly unrelated to blog management, so this is caution rather than high risk.
From the description, the tool will at minimum handle user-provided drafts, edited content, and publishing state for blog posts, and may interact with content from AI coding editors. The materials do not specify which local files, directories, or other resources it can read or write, so its data-access boundary is unclear and should be treated as limited but insufficiently documented.
Positive factors include that the project is open source under the MIT license, making the code in principle auditable. However, it comes from a third-party registry, has 0 stars, unknown maintenance status, and no README, which means weak community validation and limited audit context. No explicit malicious red flags are shown, but supply-chain trust still requires extra verification.
Copy the install command and let the AI configure it · recommended for beginners
No copy-paste install info for "ghost-mcp" yet — see the docs or source repo.
Use ghost-mcp to import five Markdown posts from the local drafts folder into Ghost, generate excerpts and tags for each post, and publish them live.
Creates multiple Ghost posts from Markdown files, adds excerpts and tags, and publishes them.
Use ghost-mcp to find the Ghost post titled '2024 Product Roadmap', rewrite section two more concisely, update the timeline details, and keep the existing author and SEO settings.
Finds the target post, updates its content, and preserves existing metadata and publishing settings.
Use ghost-mcp to sync the blog directory in the current project with Ghost: create new posts automatically, update existing posts by slug, and skip unchanged content.
Syncs local files with Ghost by creating new posts, updating matched ones, and skipping unchanged content.
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