Mozilla has introduced Thunderbolt, a new AI client designed for users and businesses to run self-hosted AI infrastructure without depending on cloud services. The tool builds on the open-source Haystack framework to create a sovereign AI client compatible with various APIs. It emphasizes data control, security, and cross-platform support.
Mozilla announced Thunderbolt on April 16, positioning it as a front-end client for self-hosted AI setups. Unlike standalone AI models, Thunderbolt layers on top of Haystack, an open-source framework for building custom AI pipelines. Mozilla describes it as a 'sovereign AI client' that connects to ACP-compatible agents or OpenAI-compatible APIs, including those from Claude, Codex, OpenClaw, DeepSeek, and OpenCode, as reported by Ars Technica. It integrates with local enterprise data via open protocols and uses an offline SQLite database as a reliable reference point, addressing concerns over data leaks to external providers. The client includes optional end-to-end encryption and device-level access controls for enhanced security. Thunderbird supports common AI functions such as chat, search, research, automation, and cross-device workflows. Native applications are available for Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, Android, and the web, with source code on GitHub for building from React. While under active development and undergoing a security audit, Mozilla is inviting enterprise clients for paid licensing and on-site deployments. Thunderbolt is funded by a Mozilla grant and managed by MZLA Technologies, the subsidiary handling Thunderbird since 2020. It aligns with Mozilla's broader AI initiatives through Mozilla.ai and a late 2025 pledge to foster a 'decentralized open source AI ecosystem' rivaling major AI providers.