The landscape of digital trust is evolving to meet the demands of artificial intelligence. Keyfactor, a leader in digital trust management, has taken a significant step in bridging AI operations with Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) by launching its Command MCP Server on the AWS Marketplace. This move makes its experimental, agentic AI platform more accessible for enterprises seeking to secure and scale their AI-driven security initiatives.
Keyfactor's Command MCP Server is now available for deployment via the AWS Marketplace.
The server enables secure connections between AI agents and PKI/certificate management systems.
It features a new multi-user, scalable architecture, moving from a single-user prototype.
Centralized management allows for oversight of AI-assisted certificate operations.
The release supports Keyfactor's vision of "PKI for AI" to establish trust in AI ecosystems.
It simplifies evaluation for developers and researchers within secure AWS environments.
This release marks a fundamental shift in architecture. The Command MCP Server has been redesigned from a desktop-only, single-user prototype into a robust, remotely accessible server. This new model supports multiple AI clients—including web, desktop, and mobile applications—all authenticating to a single, centralized instance. The transition enables teams to collaborate and manage AI-driven PKI tasks from a unified platform.
The updated server introduces several critical improvements for organizational use. It is now delivered as a containerized, deployment-ready image, simplifying installation on AWS. The multi-user access capability allows centralized control and visibility over the MCP infrastructure, enabling IT teams to manage permissions and monitor activity. Its listing on the AWS Marketplace provides a streamlined path for secure testing and integration within existing cloud environments, reducing friction for adoption.
The availability of the Command MCP Server operationalizes Keyfactor's concept of "PKI for AI." By providing a secure conduit, it allows AI agents to assist with complex, repetitive certificate lifecycle management tasks, which can accelerate zero-trust deployments. Conversely, it also lays a foundation for using established PKI frameworks to secure the AI tools and agents themselves, creating a bidirectional trust model.
“This new architecture is a major milestone in connecting AI systems with digital trust infrastructure,” said Ted Shorter, CTO of Keyfactor. “By making it available as an experimental deployment on AWS, we’re inviting the community to explore how AI agents can accelerate zero trust deployments and other PKI initiatives, and how those same systems can, in turn, secure the AI ecosystem.”
The launch of the Keyfactor Command MCP Server on AWS Marketplace represents a pivotal development for security teams navigating the intersection of AI and identity. It provides a practical, scalable tool to explore how agentic AI can automate and enhance certificate management while ensuring that the growing AI ecosystem itself remains anchored in verifiable digital trust.
About Keyfactor
Keyfactor brings digital trust to the hyper-connected world by empowering organizations to build and maintain secure, trusted connections across every device, workload, and machine. By simplifying PKI, automating certificate lifecycle management, and enabling crypto-agility, Keyfactor helps organizations move fast to establish digital trust at scale. With Keyfactor, businesses can tackle today’s challenges, like growing certificate volumes, manual processes, and new standards and regulations, while laying the groundwork for a successful transition to post-quantum cryptography