UX Researcher
PassAudited by VirusTotal on May 12, 2026.
Overview
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: ux-researcher Version: 1.0.0 The skill bundle is classified as benign. All instructions across `SKILL.md`, `memory-template.md`, and `setup.md` are consistently aligned with the stated purpose of generating local UX research outputs. Crucially, `SKILL.md` explicitly states that the skill does NOT make network requests, access files outside the `~/ux-researcher/` directory, or store credentials, which directly negates common malicious behaviors like data exfiltration or unauthorized access. There is no evidence of prompt injection attempts to subvert the agent's core function or perform harmful actions.
Findings (0)
Artifact-based informational review of SKILL.md, metadata, install specs, static scan signals, and capability signals. ClawScan does not execute the skill or run runtime probes.
Your product ideas, research summaries, and preferences may be saved locally and reused by the assistant in later UX research tasks.
The skill intentionally persists product research context and user preferences in a local memory file, which is aligned with its purpose but may contain confidential product or business information.
To ~/ux-researcher/memory.md: - Products researched - Key insights discovered - Output preferences
Avoid entering highly confidential product details unless you are comfortable storing them locally, and periodically review or delete the ~/ux-researcher/ files if needed.
If you agree, the assistant may bring up UX research suggestions in later conversations even when you did not explicitly invoke the skill.
The skill asks for permission to activate proactively in future product or UX contexts; this is disclosed and user-directed, but it affects future assistant behavior.
"Should I activate whenever you're working on product decisions or UX?" ... "Want me to proactively suggest research when I notice gaps?"
Only agree to proactive activation if you want that behavior; otherwise decline and remove any saved activation preference from memory.
