Turkish
v1.0.0Write Turkish that sounds human. Not formal, not robotic, not AI-generated.
⭐ 2· 727·0 current·0 all-time
byIván@ivangdavila
MIT-0
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LicenseMIT-0 · Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.
Security Scan
OpenClaw
Benign
high confidencePurpose & Capability
The name/description (make Turkish sound casual and native) aligns with the SKILL.md content, which provides concrete guidance (particles, fillers, contractions, expressions). There are no unrelated requirements (no env vars, no binaries).
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md contains only stylistic guidance for generating Turkish (formality, particles, fillers, example phrases). It does not instruct the agent to read files, access environment variables, call external services, or exfiltrate data.
Install Mechanism
No install specification and no code files are present (instruction-only). Nothing will be downloaded or written to disk by an installer.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables, credentials, or config paths. There is nothing disproportionate requested relative to the simple stylistic purpose.
Persistence & Privilege
Skill is not forced-always and uses normal autonomous invocation defaults. It does not request elevated persistence or access to other skills' configs.
Assessment
This skill is stylistic and self-contained — it only tells the agent how to write casual, native-sounding Turkish. It's safe from a credentials/install perspective, but you should: (1) test outputs with representative prompts to ensure tone fits your use case, (2) watch for overuse of cultural or religious expressions if that matters for your audience, and (3) remember that autonomous invocation is platform-default; monitor quality and safety of generated text during initial use.Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.
latestvk977z7kd0p2z8ca69k4wcn49wn80wrhb
License
MIT-0
Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.
