Dutch

Security checks across malware telemetry and agentic risk

Overview

This skill is a Dutch writing-style guide with no code or system access, though users should override its casual tone in formal situations.

Safe to install as a Dutch style helper. Before using it for workplace, customer support, legal, medical, academic, elder-directed, or unfamiliar-recipient messages, explicitly ask for formal Dutch and u/uw wording.

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 (3)

Vague Triggers

Medium
Confidence
81% confidence
Finding
The skill is framed as a general Dutch-writing style overlay with no clear trigger boundaries, so it could activate for a wide range of ordinary requests and silently steer output toward one register. That creates policy and user-intent misalignment risk because the assistant may apply casual, human-sounding Dutch even when the user did not ask for that style or when a more neutral/formal tone would be safer.

Natural-Language Policy Violations

High
Confidence
89% confidence
Finding
The skill sets a default register of casual/direct Dutch without requiring user opt-in, which can override the user's intended tone and social context. In practice this may lead to disrespectful, inappropriate, or unprofessional phrasing in contexts where formality matters, especially because the guidance is phrased as a default rather than a conditional suggestion.

Natural-Language Policy Violations

High
Confidence
93% confidence
Finding
Defaulting to je/jij for 'most contexts' hard-codes an informal second-person pronoun choice that may be socially incorrect, culturally insensitive, or professionally damaging. Because pronoun/register selection is central to politeness in Dutch, applying this by default can materially alter meaning and relationship dynamics in customer service, elder interactions, workplace communication, or any unfamiliar audience.

VirusTotal

64/64 vendors flagged this skill as clean.

View on VirusTotal