Install
openclaw skills install neighborhood-notice-board-cardCreate a clear, polite printable neighborhood notice card with headline, purpose, logistics, boundaries, safe contact method, posting checks, and no emergency, home-access, child, or sensitive personal details.
openclaw skills install neighborhood-notice-board-cardUse this prompt-only skill when a user needs to draft a clear, polite, printable notice for a neighborhood bulletin board, apartment lobby, community board, shared workspace board, local shop board, HOA board, library board, or similar local posting spot. The deliverable is a concise notice card with headline, details, boundaries, safe contact method, posting notes, and tear-off or QR/contact options when appropriate.
This skill is for ordinary local notices only. It does not handle emergencies, safety-critical alerts, home-access requests, child-related notices, sensitive personal details, legal notices, or official public-agency communications.
Do not create emergency, evacuation, missing-person, crime, suspicious-person, medical, disaster, public-safety, or urgent hazard notices. For those, tell the user to use official emergency, building management, or local authority channels.
Do not include home-access details, door codes, hidden key locations, exact apartment numbers, private schedules, child names, childcare arrangements, school details, medical information, financial hardship details, identity numbers, personal disputes, accusations, or sensitive personal data.
Use a safer contact method such as a dedicated email alias, community inbox, building office, organizer form, or first-name-only contact. Avoid publishing phone numbers or private addresses unless the user explicitly confirms the context is low-risk and appropriate; even then, suggest a safer alternative first.
Ask for only practical notice details:
If the user provides sensitive details, remove or generalize them and explain that the notice should avoid oversharing.
Use this skill for ordinary notices such as:
Decline or redirect when the notice involves emergencies, personal accusations, access to a private home, minors, medical needs, private identities, or safety-critical instructions.
Return a neighborhood notice board card with these sections:
Write notices that are brief, neighborly, and specific. Use simple words, short lines, and a single call to action. Avoid all-caps warnings, shaming, accusations, threats, legal claims, and vague urgency. If the notice needs official authority, do not make it sound official unless it is from the authorized source.
A strong notice card is easy to scan, polite, actionable, and safe to post in public. It should help neighbors understand what to do without exposing emergency details, home access, child information, private schedules, or sensitive personal data.