decision-clarity-skill

v1.0.0

Improve decision quality by clarifying the real problem, exposing hidden assumptions, reasoning from fundamental facts, reducing unnecessary complexity, and...

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MIT-0
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LicenseMIT-0 · Free to use, modify, and redistribute. No attribution required.
Security Scan
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Benign
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Benign
high confidence
Purpose & Capability
The name/description (decision clarity) matches the provided SKILL.md and multiple workflow/reference documents. There are no unrelated binaries, env vars, or config paths requested. The files are all guidance and templates appropriate for the stated purpose.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md and the included workflow/reference files instruct only on reasoning steps, question framing, and structured outputs. They do not direct the agent to read system files, access credentials, call external endpoints, or transmit user data to unknown destinations.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec and no code to execute; the README suggests an optional install via an external 'skills' CLI, but the skill bundle itself is instruction-only and contains no downloadable/executable artifacts.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables, credentials, or config paths. No secrets or unrelated service access are requested or used in the instructions.
Persistence & Privilege
Flags are default (always:false, agent invocation enabled). The skill does not request permanent presence or elevated privileges, nor does it instruct modifying other skills or system-wide settings.
Assessment
This skill is an instruction-only reasoning/template pack and appears internally consistent with its decision‑clarity purpose. Key points to consider before installing: (1) Source provenance: the package metadata lists no homepage and the registry owner is not human-readable — if you require vetted authorship, verify the maintainer or prefer a published repo with a known author. (2) Runtime behavior: the skill contains only text guidance (no code), so it cannot itself exfiltrate data or run commands; however, be mindful if you later combine its prompts with other skills or tools that do access files, networks, or credentials. (3) Autonomous invocation is normal for skills; if you have strict constraints, restrict agent autonomy or review skill invocation policies. Overall, there are no disproportionate env/config/installation demands, so the main non-security consideration is whether you trust the unknown source/author and the style of guidance for your use case.

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

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License

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

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