Trip Save
PassAudited by ClawScan on May 1, 2026.
Overview
Trip Save is a coherent instruction-only travel bookmarking skill; the main thing to notice is that it can fetch provided links and store travel saves in memory.
This skill appears safe and purpose-aligned for saving travel inspiration. Before installing, be aware that links you ask it to save may be fetched, and the resulting destination, tags, source, and date are intended to persist in memory for later recall.
Findings (3)
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.
When you ask it to save a URL, the agent may fetch that page and use its content to create the saved destination and tags.
The skill directs the agent to use browsing/fetching tools on user-provided URLs. This is purpose-aligned for saving travel inspiration, but users should understand that links may be accessed and parsed.
Use web search or web fetch to get the page content
Only ask it to save links you are comfortable having fetched, and quickly verify the saved destination and tags.
You cannot easily inspect an upstream project or homepage for maintainer context, though there is no executable code in this artifact set.
The skill has limited provenance information, but the supplied artifacts also show no code files and no installation mechanism, reducing supply-chain risk.
Source: unknown; Homepage: none; No install spec — this is an instruction-only skill.
Treat the publisher identity as your main trust signal and review the skill text before enabling it.
Your saved travel interests and source links may persist and be recalled later when you ask to see saved places.
The skill intentionally writes travel destinations, tags, source URLs or text, and dates into memory for later retrieval.
Remember each save as: "Saved destination: [name] | Tags: [tags] | Source: [url or text] | Date: [today]"
Avoid saving private itinerary details or sensitive links unless you are comfortable with them being stored in memory, and clear memory entries if they are no longer needed.
