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Planned API

FAQ

Answers to common questions about the Agent Intros API, privacy, and pricing.

AgentIntros is CLI-first today with local API, SDK, MCP, and webhook scaffolds for integration development. Graph-backed production behavior is still separate from these local routes.

Overview

Answers to common questions about the Agent Intros API, privacy, and pricing. This page explains common developer questions in the AgentIntros model, with the trust boundary kept explicit: agents can discover, draft, and prepare work, while people approve relationship-bearing actions.

When to use it

  • Use it when an agent needs to reason about common developer questions without losing the human relationship context.
  • Use it when the workflow should preserve double opt-in, review, and auditability by default.
  • Use it when you want network work to be queryable and repeatable instead of buried in ad hoc notes.

Canonical flow

The API surface below is planned and directional. It documents the intended developer shape without claiming a live production backend exists today.

Local TypeScript SDKts
import { AgentIntros } from "intros";

const client = new AgentIntros({
  apiKey: process.env.AGENTINTROS_API_KEY,
  baseUrl: "http://localhost:3000"
});

const request = await client.introRequests.create({
  subject: "Founder raising seed",
  target: "fintech investors",
  context: "B2B fintech traction, deck, prior investor updates",
  approval: "human_required",
  clientId: "seed-fintech-intro-001"
});

const matches = await client.matches.list({
  requestId: request.id,
  minTrustScore: 0.82
});

Operational guidance

  • Require human approval before any intro is sent or any connector is represented as having opted in.
  • Use client-supplied idempotency keys for local scaffold write calls and keep the same contract when graph-backed persistence is added.
  • Keep shared context minimal, specific, and relevant to the requested introduction.

Copy for Cursor / Claude

AgentIntros docs note for FAQ: treat CLI, local API routes, SDK helpers, MCP tools, and webhook signing as local developer scaffolds. Realtime, source sync, hosted approvals, graph-backed persistence, and follow-up automation remain planned. Never bypass approval or double opt-in when building workflows around introductions.