The Optimal Dose Restore Your Health With The Power Of Vitamin D3

Security checks across malware telemetry and agentic risk

Overview

This health skill is coherent and contains no executable malware signals, but it gives actionable high-dose vitamin D guidance with insufficient built-in medical safety boundaries.

Review carefully before installing. This skill should be treated as educational book-summary content, not personalized medical advice. Do not start, increase, or maintain high-dose vitamin D based on the skill alone; use clinician guidance and appropriate blood testing, especially if pregnant, taking medications, or dealing with kidney disease, calcium disorders, sarcoidosis, or other health conditions.

SkillSpector

By NVIDIA
Vulnerability Patterns
  • Prompt InjectionInstruction Override, Hidden Instructions, Exfiltration Commands
  • Excessive AgencyUnrestricted Tool Access, Autonomous Decision Making, Scope Creep
  • 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
Findings (8)

Vague Triggers

Medium
Confidence
95% confidence
Finding
The trigger list includes broad, common wellness phrases such as 'Vitamin D,' 'Immune health,' and 'Vitamin D deficiency,' which can cause the skill to activate in many unrelated or only loosely related contexts. In a health-advice skill, unintended activation is risky because it may inject prescriptive supplementation guidance into conversations where the user did not explicitly request this book's framework or where safer medical context is needed.

Vague Triggers

Medium
Confidence
91% confidence
Finding
The onboarding language says the skill will appear whenever it 'senses this book could help,' which defines no clear invocation boundary and encourages discretionary activation by the agent. That ambiguity increases the chance of unsolicited health guidance, especially around supplementation and immune claims, in situations where the user did not ask for this skill or may need professional medical advice instead.

Missing User Warnings

High
Confidence
99% confidence
Finding
The skill presents high-dose vitamin D guidance, including body-weight-based dosing and assertions that doses up to 30,000-50,000 IU/day are safe, without prominent warnings to seek clinician oversight or verify contraindications. This is dangerous because excessive vitamin D can cause hypercalcemia and other harms, and users may act on the advice directly due to the authoritative tone and repeated safety assurances.

Missing User Warnings

High
Confidence
97% confidence
Finding
The file gives concrete high-dose vitamin D3 instructions, including 30-50 IU/lb/day and examples such as 6,000-10,000 IU/day, while emphasizing positive outcomes and only briefly mentioning supervision for an extreme dose. It does not provide clear safety warnings about toxicity, hypercalcemia, contraindications, drug interactions, or an explicit directive to seek clinician oversight before following the protocol, which could lead users to self-administer unsafe doses.

Missing User Warnings

Medium
Confidence
98% confidence
Finding
The file gives concrete vitamin D3 dosing instructions, target blood levels, adjustment rules, and adjunct supplement guidance without any safety warning, contraindication screening, or recommendation to consult a licensed clinician. This is dangerous because vitamin D dosing is individualized and excessive supplementation can cause toxicity or harm, especially for users with kidney disease, hypercalcemia, sarcoidosis, pregnancy, interacting medications, or other conditions.

Missing User Warnings

Medium
Confidence
98% confidence
Finding
This content gives specific medical dosing guidance, target serum levels, and adjunct supplement recommendations without any warning to seek clinician oversight, lab monitoring, or consider contraindications. In a user-facing health skill, advising that most adults need 5,000-10,000 IU/day and suggesting magnesium/K2 co-supplementation can prompt unsafe self-treatment, especially for users with kidney disease, hypercalcemia risk, pregnancy, medication interactions, or other conditions.

Missing User Warnings

Medium
Confidence
96% confidence
Finding
The file gives concrete vitamin D3 dosing instructions based on body weight and target blood levels without any safety warning, contraindication screening, upper-limit context, or instruction to consult a clinician. In a consumer-facing skill, users may treat this as personalized medical advice, which creates a real risk of overdosing, delayed care, or harm for people with conditions such as kidney disease, hypercalcemia, sarcoidosis, or interactions with other supplements and medications.

Missing User Warnings

Medium
Confidence
94% confidence
Finding
Telling users to increase vitamin D dose in fall and winter encourages self-adjustment of a hormone-like supplement without individualized assessment or warnings about toxicity and medical exceptions. While less acute than the explicit starting-dose formula, it still normalizes unsupervised dose escalation and may compound risk when combined with the earlier recommendation.

VirusTotal

63/63 vendors flagged this skill as clean.

View on VirusTotal