Bring your own agent. We make it sharper and safer.
An MCP server that holds your keys, so your agent never has to. Connect any agent — we guard the keys, focus every request, and keep work on track — so every token does more, and work lands accurately.
MCP stands for Model · Context · Protocol — the open standard your agent already speaks. Here is what each word means at wikiTaTa.
Model
— your agent. Bring the one you already use: Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Cursor — anything that speaks MCP. wikiTaTa doesn’t replace your agent; it gives it a safe place to work.
(Want a second opinion? It can put a panel of models on the same question — and through OpenRouter, reach virtually any model in existence.)
Context
— what it’s allowed to see. Your keys stay sealed, your data stays in your database, and the agent gets exactly the context the task needs and nothing more.
Protocol
— how they talk. One secure conduit between your agent and your stuff. No custom plugin, no inherited permissions. wikiTaTa speaks the open MCP standard as a secure, multi-tenant server.
*Contact us for data residency questions.
Model-agnostic, by design
Bring the agent you like. And when you want more than one brain on a problem, wikiTaTa reaches a deep roster.
AnthropicClaude Opus, Sonnet, Haiku
OpenAIGPT-4o, GPT-4.1, o4-mini
GoogleGemini 2.5 Pro, Flash, Flash-Lite
OpenRouterGrok, DeepSeek, Llama, Mistral, Qwen — and hundreds more
OllamaLocal models, on your own hardware
Trust
Agents never see your keys.
Credentials live encrypted in a vault. Your agent works through wikiTaTa and never touches the plaintext — so a prompt-injection attack can’t steal what was never in its context.
Economics
Your agent. Your tokens. Spent well.
You bring the agent, so you own the usage. wikiTaTa keeps the agent in scope and tracks every token — the spend you already pay for goes further, and work lands more accurately.
Not a plugin. A governance layer.
Most MCP servers are thin connectors that inherit your permissions and move data. wikiTaTa injects security context and enforces how data may be touched. Here is where its effort actually goes.
45%Secure data accessRaw database operations abstracted behind guarded RPCs — an air-gap between the agent and your data.
30%Agent routing & controlA stateless traffic controller. Agents are ephemeral actors with short-lived keys, never persistent users.
20%Multi-tenant orchestrationTenant context resolved on the fly — isolated environments inside one piece of infrastructure.
5%Utility & telemetryThe 100+ tools that handle logging, monitoring, and housekeeping.
Questions
What is MCP (Model Context Protocol)?
MCP — the Model Context Protocol — is an open standard, created by Anthropic, that lets an AI agent connect to outside tools and data through one secure interface. wikiTaTa is an MCP server built on that standard.
What does “bring your own agent” mean?
You connect whatever AI agent you already use — Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Cursor, or any MCP-capable client. You own the usage and the tokens. wikiTaTa is model-agnostic: it doesn’t care which agent you bring.
Does my agent ever see my API keys?
No. Keys live in an encrypted vault. The agent works through wikiTaTa and never touches the plaintext value, so a prompt-injection attack can’t exfiltrate what was never in the agent’s context.
Which models does wikiTaTa support?
Directly: Anthropic (Claude), OpenAI (GPT, o-series), Google (Gemini), and local models via Ollama. Through OpenRouter it reaches Grok, DeepSeek, Llama, Mistral, Qwen and hundreds more — so wikiTaTa can put a panel of models on the same question.
Building with AI?
wikiTaTa is in private early access. If this is your kind of problem, request an invitation.