The Sports Gene

Security checks across malware telemetry and agentic risk

Overview

This is a text-only educational sports genetics skill with no executable behavior, but users should treat its ancestry and talent-identification guidance cautiously.

Install only if you want an educational book-based assistant about sports genetics. Treat its genetics, ancestry, and talent-identification guidance as discussion material, not as a basis for excluding, labeling, medically advising, or making consequential decisions about athletes or children.

SkillSpector

By NVIDIA
Vulnerability Patterns
  • Trigger AbuseOverly Broad Trigger, Shadow Command Trigger, Keyword Baiting Trigger
  • Prompt InjectionInstruction Override, Hidden Instructions, Exfiltration Commands
  • 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 (3)

Vague Triggers

Medium
Confidence
93% confidence
Finding
The trigger list is extremely broad, including generic phrases like 'training,' 'talent,' and 'genetics,' plus activation when a user says they just installed the skill or does not know how to start. This can cause the skill to activate in unrelated contexts and steer the conversation into a sensitive topic area involving genetics, ancestry, and population differences without clear user intent.

Natural-Language Policy Violations

Medium
Confidence
95% confidence
Finding
The passage explicitly attributes distance-running success in a named population to genetic predispositions ('slender calves, altitude adaptation') without qualification, nuance, or uncertainty framing. Even in an educational skill, broad ethnicity- or locale-linked genetic claims are sensitive and can reinforce stereotypes or present contested scientific ideas as settled fact.

Missing User Warnings

Medium
Confidence
89% confidence
Finding
This guidance encourages users to assess 'genetic ceilings,' 'trainability,' and athlete selection in ways that can be over-applied to other people, including children or team candidates, without safeguards against discrimination, stereotyping, or premature exclusion. In this skill’s context, the risk is elevated because it presents population/genetics-based sports claims as practical techniques, which could lead users to make consequential decisions based on speculative or sensitive biological assumptions rather than qualified evaluation.

VirusTotal

64/64 vendors flagged this skill as clean.

View on VirusTotal