Smart Home

v1.0.0

Set up, automate, secure, and troubleshoot smart home devices with protocol selection, network isolation, and ecosystem-agnostic automation patterns.

2· 1.3k·15 current·16 all-time
byIván@ivangdavila
MIT-0
Download zip
LicenseMIT-0 · Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.
Security Scan
VirusTotalVirusTotal
Benign
View report →
OpenClawOpenClaw
Benign
high confidence
Purpose & Capability
The skill's name and description (setup, automate, secure, troubleshoot smart home devices) match the included documents (setup, automations, security, takeover, troubleshooting, renters). No unrelated binaries, env vars, or credentials are requested. Minor note: the package has no homepage and an unknown owner ID, which reduces provenance but does not make the content incoherent.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md and the included documents provide step‑by‑step human instructions (reset devices, change router passwords, create VLANs, use local hubs). The instructions do not direct the agent to read local files, exfiltrate data, call unknown remote endpoints, or access credentials beyond normal human actions. Actions that affect network/router configuration are explicit and appropriate for the stated purpose.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files beyond documentation. As an instruction-only skill it writes nothing to disk and pulls no external code, which is the lowest technical risk.
Credentials
The skill requires no environment variables, binaries, or credentials. All recommended actions (change WiFi password, enable MFA on accounts, factory reset devices) are proportionate to smart home setup and takeover workflows.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and there is no installation behavior. The skill can be invoked by the agent (platform default), but it contains only human-facing guidance and does not attempt to modify other skills or system settings itself.
Assessment
This skill is an instruction manual (no code, no credentials requested) and its recommendations are coherent with managing smart homes. Before following network-level steps (changing router passwords, creating VLANs, disabling UPnP, or performing factory resets): 1) confirm you have administrative access to the router and devices; 2) back up router configuration and document current settings so you can revert if needed; 3) if you rent, get landlord permission for anything that isn't clearly portable; 4) verify device ownership and consider contacting manufacturers when devices are locked to prior accounts; and 5) treat unknown-source guidance cautiously — the procedures look reasonable, but you should cross-check critical actions (firmware updates, account recovery, manufacturer-specific reset) against official vendor documentation. If you're uncomfortable performing network changes, involve someone with networking experience.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

latestvk97e4dcdc0pfkaygadmgkhx5hn811agf

License

MIT-0
Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.

Comments