The Diabetes Code: Prevent and Reverse Type 2 Diabetes Naturally

Security checks across malware telemetry and agentic risk

Overview

This is a medical advice skill with no executable code, but it gives broad, prescriptive diabetes and fasting guidance that users should review carefully before installing.

Install only if you specifically want a book-framework assistant for The Diabetes Code, not neutral diabetes care guidance. Do not use it to change insulin, metformin, sulfonylureas, diet, or fasting behavior without clinician supervision, especially if you have diabetes, kidney disease, pregnancy, an eating disorder history, frailty, or take glucose-lowering medication.

SkillSpector

By NVIDIA
Vulnerability Patterns
  • Prompt InjectionInstruction Override, Hidden Instructions, Exfiltration Commands
  • Trigger AbuseOverly Broad Trigger, Shadow Command Trigger, Keyword Baiting Trigger
  • Data ExfiltrationExternal Transmission, Env Variable Harvesting, File System Enumeration
  • Privilege EscalationExcessive Permissions, Sudo/Root Execution, Credential Access
  • Supply ChainUnpinned Dependencies, External Script Fetching, Obfuscated Code
Findings (7)

Vague Triggers

High
Confidence
95% confidence
Finding
The trigger logic is excessively broad and includes many generic diabetes and nutrition terms, making the skill likely to activate in ordinary health conversations without clear user intent to use this specific framework. In a medical context, over-triggering is dangerous because it can inject strong, non-standard medical claims and dietary advice into conversations where the user may be seeking neutral or clinically grounded guidance.

Missing User Warnings

High
Confidence
98% confidence
Finding
The skill presents prescriptive low-carb and fasting guidance for diabetes, including fasting schedules, while minimizing medications and lacking a prominent, repeated safety warning that changes in diet or fasting can be risky for people on glucose-lowering drugs or with other conditions. In this context, users could reduce food intake or alter treatment without clinician oversight, creating a real risk of hypoglycemia, medication mismanagement, or delayed evidence-based care.

Missing User Warnings

High
Confidence
98% confidence
Finding
This content gives actionable medical guidance for type 2 diabetes, including intermittent fasting protocols and claims of medication reduction, without clear warnings that such changes require clinician supervision. For people taking insulin or glucose-lowering drugs, following this advice unsupervised can cause hypoglycemia, dehydration, electrolyte problems, or dangerous delay of appropriate medical care.

Missing User Warnings

Medium
Confidence
94% confidence
Finding
The skill makes sweeping claims that insulin and oral diabetes medications are harmful, ineffective, or 'a lie' without balancing context or safety caveats. In a health-focused skill intended for users seeking self-management advice, this can undermine adherence to prescribed treatment and encourage abrupt discontinuation of effective medications, creating immediate medical risk.

Missing User Warnings

High
Confidence
97% confidence
Finding
This section gives direct medical-treatment advice by asserting that low-carb diets and intermittent fasting are the cure and citing reversal outcomes, without any safety caveats, personalization limits, or instruction to consult a qualified clinician. In the context of diabetes, users may change medications, insulin dosing, or fasting behavior on their own, creating a real risk of hypoglycemia, delayed care, or worsening disease management.

Missing User Warnings

High
Confidence
98% confidence
Finding
This is actionable medical advice for managing type 2 diabetes that recommends intermittent/prolonged fasting and discourages medications such as insulin or sulfonylureas without any safety screening, clinician oversight guidance, or emergency warnings. In a diabetes-focused skill, users are likely to follow this literally, which can lead to hypoglycemia, dehydration, delayed treatment, or unsafe medication changes, especially for people on glucose-lowering drugs or with comorbidities.

Missing User Warnings

High
Confidence
96% confidence
Finding
This is a true safety vulnerability. The content states that fasting is generally safe for most people and frames concerns as largely mistaken, while only briefly noting supervision for people on diabetes medications; in a diabetes-focused skill, many users may be on insulin, sulfonylureas, or have comorbidities that make fasting risky. That messaging can encourage users to begin fasting without individualized medical review, creating a real risk of hypoglycemia, dehydration, electrolyte imbalance, and delayed medical care.

VirusTotal

VirusTotal findings are pending for this skill version.

View on VirusTotal