Family Emergency Contact Card
PassAudited by ClawScan on May 10, 2026.
Overview
The provided files describe a no-code contact-card helper that is generally well-scoped, but users should limit private medical/contact details and ignore unexplained wallet or credential signals unless clarified.
This appears safe to use as a no-code template, but treat the information you enter as private. Include only the details someone truly needs in an emergency, keep public and private versions separate, do not enter passwords, door codes, ID numbers, or wallet credentials, and periodically replace outdated printed or saved copies.
Findings (2)
Artifact-based informational review of SKILL.md, metadata, install specs, static scan signals, and capability signals. ClawScan does not execute the skill or run runtime probes.
The generated card could reveal private family, health, location, or care information if shared too broadly or kept in outdated copies.
The skill intentionally asks for sensitive emergency, care, and contact details, but it also limits what should be collected and warns against highly sensitive records or credentials.
Urgent notes that helpers need to know, such as allergies, medications to mention, mobility needs, communication needs, pickup limitations... Do not ask for full medical records, ID numbers... passwords, door codes, alarm codes...
Only include details needed for emergencies, avoid passwords or identity numbers, keep private versions limited to trusted helpers, and replace old copies when updating the card.
A user could be confused into thinking wallet access or sensitive credentials are needed, even though the skill instructions do not require them.
These signals suggest wallet or credential-related capability, which is not aligned with an instruction-only emergency contact card; no provided file actually requests or uses such credentials.
Capability signals: crypto; requires-wallet; requires-sensitive-credentials
Do not provide wallet credentials, passwords, tokens, or other account secrets to this skill; the publisher should remove or explain these capability signals.
