API and trust

Acceptable Usage

Acceptable Usage

ClawHub hosts skills, plugins, packages, and marketplace metadata for OmeniaClaw. Use this page to decide whether content or publishing behavior belongs on ClawHub.

These rules apply to what a listing does, what it asks users to run, how it represents itself, and how publishers use ClawHub's discovery, install, and trust surfaces. For moderation states and account standing, see Moderation and Account Safety. For copyright or other rights claims, see Content Rights Requests.

Allowed content

ClawHub welcomes content that is useful, understandable, and published in good faith.

Category Allowed when
Developer productivity The listing helps users build, test, migrate, debug, document, or operate software.
UI, data, and automation workflows The scope is clear, required credentials are explicit, and risky actions include review, dry-run, preview, or confirmation paths.
Defensive security, moderation, and abuse review The tool is framed for authorized review, preserves evidence, and keeps human approval boundaries clear.
Personal or team workflows The workflow uses consent-based accounts, transparent setup, and explicit permissions.
Maintained catalogs Each listing is distinct, useful, accurately described, and reasonably maintained.

Context matters. The same topic can be acceptable in a narrow defensive or consent-based setting and unacceptable when packaged as an abuse workflow.

Disallowed content

ClawHub does not host content whose main purpose is abuse, deception, unsafe execution, or rights infringement.

Category Not allowed
Unauthorized access or security bypass Auth bypass, account takeover, rate-limit abuse, live call or agent takeover, reusable session theft, or auto-approving pairing flows for unapproved users.
Platform abuse and ban evasion Stealth accounts after bans, account warming or farming, fake engagement, multi-account automation, mass posting, spam bots, or automation built to avoid detection.
Fraud, scams, and deceptive financial workflows Fake certificates or invoices, deceptive payment flows, scam outreach, fake social proof, synthetic-identity workflows for fraud, or spending/charging tools without clear human approval.
Privacy-invasive enrichment or surveillance Contact scraping for spam, doxxing, stalking, lead extraction paired with unsolicited outreach, covert monitoring, non-consensual biometric matching, or use of leaked data or breach dumps.
Non-consensual impersonation or identity manipulation Face swap, digital twins, cloned influencers, fake personas, or other tooling used to impersonate or mislead.
Explicit sexual content or safety-disabled adult generation NSFW image, video, or content generation; adult-content wrappers around third-party APIs; or listings whose primary purpose is explicit sexual content.
Hidden, unsafe, or misleading execution requirements Obfuscated install commands, pipe-to-shell installers such as downloaded content run with sh or bash without clear reviewability, undeclared secret or private-key requirements, remote npx @latest execution without clear reviewability, or metadata that hides what the listing really needs to run.
Copyright-infringing or rights-violating material Republishing someone else's skill, plugin, docs, brand assets, or proprietary code without permission; violating license terms; or impersonating the original author or publisher.

Disallowed marketplace behavior

ClawHub also reviews how publishers use the marketplace. Do not use ClawHub to manipulate discovery, metrics, trust signals, moderation systems, or user attention.

Disallowed marketplace behavior includes:

  • bulk publishing large numbers of low-effort, duplicative, placeholder, or machine-generated listings that do not appear to have real user value
  • flooding search or category surfaces with near-identical skills or plugins
  • publishing hundreds of listings with little or no usage, maintenance, source clarity, or meaningful differentiation
  • artificially inflating installs, downloads, stars, or other engagement metrics through automation, self-install loops, fake accounts, coordinated activity, paid engagement, or other non-organic behavior
  • creating or rotating accounts to evade moderation, bans, publisher limits, or marketplace review
  • misleading users about ownership, source, capabilities, security posture, install requirements, or affiliation with another project or publisher
  • repeatedly uploading content that has already been hidden, removed, or blocked without fixing the underlying issue

High-volume publishing is not automatically abuse. Large catalogs are acceptable when the listings are meaningfully different, accurately described, maintained, and used by real users. Large catalogs become a trust and safety problem when volume is paired with thin, duplicative, misleading, unmaintained, or artificially promoted listings.

Content rights

If you believe content on ClawHub infringes your copyright or other rights, use Content Rights Requests. Do not use normal marketplace reports for copyright or rights claims unless the listing is also unsafe, malicious, or misleading.

Review and enforcement

ClawHub may use automated checks, statistical abuse signals, user reports, and staff review to identify unsafe content or abusive publishing behavior. A signal does not prove abuse by itself; it helps ClawHub decide what needs review.

We may:

  • hide, hold, remove, soft-delete, or, where supported for the resource type, hard-delete violating listings
  • block downloads or installs for unsafe releases
  • revoke API tokens
  • soft-delete associated content
  • restrict publishing access
  • ban repeat or severe offenders

We do not guarantee warning-first enforcement for obvious abuse. See Moderation and Account Safety for reports, moderation holds, hidden listings, bans, and account standing.

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