How MCP fits private-market discovery
MCP gives AI clients a standard way to call tools such as company search and profile retrieval, which is why it matters for structured private-market discovery platforms.
What MCP changes
Model Context Protocol gives AI clients a standard way to call tools instead of scraping pages or relying on brittle one-off integrations. For a private-market directory, that means search, profile retrieval, and watchlist actions can be exposed through a stable contract.
The same underlying data can then serve human browsing, REST consumers, and MCP clients. That reduces drift between what the website shows and what an AI assistant can act on.
What MCP does not do
MCP does not make a platform an advisor or a broker. It is a transport and tool contract. The regulatory posture still depends on what the platform exposes and whether it crosses into recommendation, transaction handling, or targeted promotion.
That is why disclosure boundaries matter. Public MCP tools should expose public-tier data only, with richer diligence material separated into clearly gated surfaces.