Talon

9 tools. 5 can modify or destroy data without limits.

1 destructive tool with no built-in limits. Policy required.

Last updated:

5 can modify or destroy data
4 read-only
9 tools total

Community server · catalogue entry verified 05/07/2026

How to control Talon ↓

What Talon exposes to your agents

Read (4) Write / Execute (4) Destructive / Financial (1)
Critical Risk

The most dangerous Talon tools

5 of Talon's 9 tools can modify, destroy, or commit something on every call — and an agent calls them with no built-in limits.

How to control Talon

PolicyLayer is an MCP gateway — it sits between your AI agents and Talon, and nothing reaches the server without passing your rules. These are the rules we recommend:

Deny destructive operations
{
  "logout": {
    "deny_if": [
      {
        "conditions": [],
        "on_deny": "Blocked by default. Requires approval."
      }
    ]
  }
}

Destructive tools should never be available to autonomous agents without human approval.

Rate limit write operations
{
  "create_application": {
    "limits": [
      {
        "counter": "create_application_per_hour",
        "window": "hour",
        "max": 30,
        "scope": "grant"
      }
    ]
  }
}

Prevents bulk unintended modifications from agents caught in loops.

Cap read operations
{
  "get_docs": {
    "limits": [
      {
        "counter": "get_docs_per_minute",
        "window": "minute",
        "max": 60,
        "scope": "grant"
      }
    ]
  }
}

Controls API costs and prevents retry loops from exhausting upstream rate limits.

  1. Create a free account and register Talon — nothing to install.
  2. Add these rules — paste them, or build them visually. Tune the limits to your setup.
  3. Point your MCP client (Claude, Cursor, anything) at your gateway URL.
ENFORCE POLICY ON TALON →

Instant setup, no code required.

All 9 Talon tools

Related servers

Other MCP servers with similar tools — same risk classification, starter policies for each.

Questions about Talon

Can an AI agent delete data through the Talon MCP server? +

Yes. The Talon server exposes 1 destructive tools including logout. These permanently remove resources with no undo. PolicyLayer blocks destructive tools by default so they never reach the upstream server.

How do I prevent bulk modifications through Talon? +

The Talon server has 2 write tools including create_application, create_organization. Set a rate limit in your policy -- for example, 10 calls per hour prevents an agent from making more than 10 modifications per hour. PolicyLayer enforces this at the gateway, before calls reach Talon.

How many tools does the Talon MCP server expose? +

9 tools across 3 categories: Destructive, Read, Write. 4 are read-only. 5 can modify, create, or delete data.

How do I enforce a policy on Talon? +

Register the Talon MCP server in PolicyLayer, apply the suggested rules above (adjust the limits to your use case), and point your AI client at the PolicyLayer proxy URL instead of the server directly. Your agents keep the same tools; PolicyLayer evaluates every call against policy before it executes. Nothing to install, live in minutes.

Enforce policy on every Talon tool call.

Deterministic rules across all 9 Talon tools. Per-identity grants. Full audit log. Live in minutes. Nothing to install.

Instant setup, no code required.

9 Talon tools catalogued and risk-classified — across an index of 43,000+ MCP servers.

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