top | item 44074336 (no title) underbluewaters | 9 months ago Successful standards usually start out scrappy, are embraced by a community, and then are blessed by standards bodies. What comes out of working groups of standards bodies rarely gains traction. See xhtml vs "html5". discuss order hn newest croes|9 months ago Does MCP still have the security issues?A big mistake in the first place to start it without proper security.That not Web 2.0 2.0, that‘s Web 1.0 jedisct1|9 months ago MCP Servers are usually installed locally and can do whatever they want on the local machine.But this is solved by sandboxes such as mcp.run . load replies (1) doug_durham|9 months ago It's a mistake to not start at all because of an issue that may not be important for many important use cases. load replies (2)
croes|9 months ago Does MCP still have the security issues?A big mistake in the first place to start it without proper security.That not Web 2.0 2.0, that‘s Web 1.0 jedisct1|9 months ago MCP Servers are usually installed locally and can do whatever they want on the local machine.But this is solved by sandboxes such as mcp.run . load replies (1) doug_durham|9 months ago It's a mistake to not start at all because of an issue that may not be important for many important use cases. load replies (2)
jedisct1|9 months ago MCP Servers are usually installed locally and can do whatever they want on the local machine.But this is solved by sandboxes such as mcp.run . load replies (1)
doug_durham|9 months ago It's a mistake to not start at all because of an issue that may not be important for many important use cases. load replies (2)
croes|9 months ago
A big mistake in the first place to start it without proper security.
That not Web 2.0 2.0, that‘s Web 1.0
jedisct1|9 months ago
But this is solved by sandboxes such as mcp.run .
doug_durham|9 months ago