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ollien | 7 months ago

Yes, sorry :)

Yeah, that makes sense if you have full control over the agent implementation. Hopefully tools like Cursor will enable such "sandboxing" (so to speak) going forward

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tptacek|7 months ago

Right: to be perfectly clear, the root cause of this situation is people pointing Cursor, a closed agent they have no visibility into, let alone control over, at an SQL-executing MCP connected to a production database. Nothing you can do with the current generation of the Cursor agent is going to make that OK. Cursor could come up with a multi-context MCP authorization framework that would make it OK! But it doesn't exist today.