MCP-Connected AI AssistantsConnector permissionsAgencies

MCP-Connected AI Assistants Connector permissions for Agencies

MCP-Connected AI Assistants connector permissions guide for agencies: verify the access path, run a safe check, and apply evidence-backed controls.

CapitalGuard Security ResearchUpdated July 14, 2026Primary-source review

The direct answer

MCP authorization can bridge an AI client to broad third-party API scopes and downstream resources. For agencies, the useful question is whether that path exists in the current workflow and who controls it.

Open Core Evidence

The real workflow

Where MCP-Connected AI Assistants enters the work

Agency teams may connect several client mailboxes, drives, knowledge sources, and project systems to a common assistant workflow.

MCP-connected assistants can discover resources and call tools exposed by local or remote servers, creating a reusable bridge between AI and files, APIs, databases, commands, and business systems.

MCP authorization can bridge an AI client to broad third-party API scopes and downstream resources.

MCP is a protocol, not a security guarantee. The effective boundary depends on the client, server implementation, transport, scopes, tokens, local process privileges, consent, and downstream systems.

The presence of this path does not prove an incident. It identifies the boundary that should be checked before more sensitive context or authority is added.

Tool-specific boundary

Inspect the real access points.

What may carry context

MCP resources and prompts

local stdio server processes

remote tools, OAuth scopes, APIs, and downstream services

Settings to verify

Server origin, command, and transport

OAuth scopes, token audience, and consent

Filesystem, network, session, logging, and downstream permissions

Why this context matters

The consequence for agencies

Agency risk compounds when staff, contractors, shared tools, and reused credentials create paths between otherwise separate client environments. In this case, a business connector can turn an over-privileged account into a broad retrieval or action surface spanning customers, employees, projects, and internal operations.

A connector does not create data, but it can make existing account permissions available through a new interface. The safe question is not only whether the connector is trusted; it is whether the connected account is broader than the task requires.

Every client remains isolated, access is attributable to a named operator, and the agency can deliver consistent evidence without revealing another client.

Context decision

Three questions before adding access

Can this operator or tool reach any repository, mailbox, drive, cache, token, or transcript belonging to another client?

Are credentials and AI sessions issued per client and person rather than shared across the agency?

Can the agency deliver useful proof to this client without including another client's names, paths, findings, or configuration?

Evidence goal: Create a separate client evidence record covering operator identity, workspace isolation, credentials, approved systems, review history, and delivery status.

A repeatable review

Four steps, no sensitive data required

  1. 1

    Write down the exact MCP-Connected AI Assistants account, workspace, project, device, and connected service used in this workflow.

  2. 2

    Verify exact OAuth redirect URIs, client consent, token audience, requested scopes, and downstream permissions.

  3. 3

    Assign the decision and next review to the client service owner or agency security lead; do not leave the access boundary as an unwritten assumption.

  4. 4

    Use per-client consent and minimize scopes rather than requesting every available capability. Record the result without copying private content or raw credentials into the report.

Controls to apply

Reduce access before adding trust

Use per-client consent and minimize scopes rather than requesting every available capability.

Use a least-privilege account or service identity created for the specific workflow.

Separate read-only retrieval from write, send, share, delete, and financial actions.

Set a recurring owner and expiry date for every connector rather than leaving access permanent.

Decision rule

Know when a formal baseline is justified

If the assistant has no connectors, document that and keep it true. If it can retrieve or change business data across services, create an access map before adding another integration.

CapitalGuard is relevant when the workflow includes repositories, recurring private work, credentials, connected systems, commands, or evidence that must be shared with another person. It does not inspect this account from the page or guarantee that an incident cannot occur.

Primary references

Trace every recommendation.

Your next evidence step

Find out whether your current AI use needs a deeper review.

The private browser-side check separates low-risk everyday use from connected files, clients, repositories, commands, and actions that deserve a formal baseline.

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