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Overview

How the SaQura MCP server works

Give your AI assistant quantum-safe encryption — locally on your machine, without confidential content ever leaving it.

Overview

The problem in one paragraph

Almost every piece of software uses encryption — a digital lock for passwords, messages and data. The locks in common use today (RSA, ECC) can be broken by a future quantum computer. Regulators such as Germany's BSI and the EU's NIS2 directive are pushing the move to quantum-safe methods. Attackers already capture data today to decrypt it later — which is why it matters now.

What it is

A crypto tool for your AI assistant

Modern AI assistants (e.g. Claude) can use external tools via an open standard called MCP. The SaQura MCP server is one such tool: it gives the assistant the ability to encrypt things in a quantum-safe way — locally on your machine. Confidential plaintext never leaves your computer.

AI assistant“encrypt this”
SaQura MCPruns locally
Ciphertextstays on the device

Who it's for

When this is the right fit

For anyone who uses AI assistants and wants encryption without coding it themselves — where confidential content must not leave the machine.

Getting started

Get going

The MCP server runs locally (e.g. via dnx) and is registered in your AI assistant. The exact steps are in the MCP docs. Free to use as a demo (watermarked); a SaQura license unlocks unlimited, watermark-free use.

dnx KyotoTech.SaQura.Mcp --version 0.3.0

What's next

Next steps