Meeting Scheduler

Security checks across malware telemetry and agentic risk

Overview

This markdown-only meeting scheduler is coherent and purpose-aligned, but users should approve calendar reads, invite creation, and especially event deletion before use.

Install only if you want an agent to help manage scheduling through a trusted calendar CLI. Confirm the calendar account, attendees, times, time zones, and descriptions before creating invites, and do not allow event deletion unless the exact event has been shown and approved.

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 (2)

Vague Triggers

Medium
Confidence
86% confidence
Finding
The skill is triggered by very broad phrases like wanting to meet someone, find a common free slot, or set up a meeting, which can overlap with many ordinary assistant interactions. In an agentic environment, this increases the chance of unintended invocation and autonomous access to calendar data or outbound scheduling actions without sufficiently specific user intent.

Missing User Warnings

Medium
Confidence
94% confidence
Finding
The rescheduling flow instructs deleting a calendar event directly, but does not require explicit confirmation, event identity verification, or warn that the action is destructive. This can cause accidental cancellation of the wrong meeting or loss of event metadata/attendee state, especially if an agent misidentifies the event or acts on ambiguous user input.

VirusTotal

62/62 vendors flagged this skill as clean.

View on VirusTotal