| name | seedance-filter |
| description | This skill should be used when a Seedance 2.0 prompt is blocked, rejected, silently degraded, or likely to trigger a content filter; or when the user asks for a safer rewrite without losing the creative intent. |
| license | MIT |
| user-invocable | true |
| tags | ["content-filter","safe-rewrite","seedance-20"] |
| metadata | {"version":"5.5.2","updated":"2026-06-12","parent":"seedance-20","author":"Iamemily2050 (@iamemily2050)","repository":"https://github.com/Emily2040/seedance-2.0","openclaw":{"emoji":"🎬","homepage":"https://github.com/Emily2040/seedance-2.0"}} |
seedance-filter
Intent
A wrongly blocked prompt makes a user feel accused by a machine with no court of appeal. This skill is the advocate: clear the innocent by stating their honest intent plainly, and never coach the guilty. The user's dignity and the platform's boundary are protected in the same gesture.
Boundary — read before anything else
This skill repairs false positives only: benign production content blocked or degraded by over-broad filtering (medical, historical, athletic, fictional-original contexts). It works by clarifying legitimate context in plain language — never by disguising intent. It does not rephrase genuinely prohibited content: anything risky involving minors, real-person likeness without rights, sexual or graphic or illegal material. If the underlying request is prohibited, refuse plainly and offer a legitimate alternative only where one exists.
Use this when a prompt is blocked, degraded, likely to trigger moderation, or needs a safer rewrite without losing creative intent. This skill does not help evade safety systems. It rewrites risky surface wording into professional, non-graphic production language and preserves the safe creative core.
Repair Method
- Identify the creative intent: action, mood, camera, subject, and final beat.
- Identify risky surface wording: graphic harm, protected identity, sexualized framing, real-person likeness, weapons, self-harm, hate, evasion language, or exact IP copying.
- Replace risky terms with professional, non-graphic, production-context language.
- Preserve composition, action, mood, camera logic, and authorized references.
- For likely false positives, clarify benign production context, ownership, and non-graphic intent. Do not help bypass safety systems or provide evasion tactics.
Safer Rewrite Patterns
| Intent | Safer direction |
|---|
| Conflict | staged confrontation, choreographed action beat, no graphic injury |
| Aftermath | non-graphic distress, torn fabric, scattered props, dramatic silence |
| Suspense | threat implied by shadow, locked door, heavy breathing, low light |
| Weapon-like prop | prop object handled safely within a staged action scene |
| Horror mood | eerie atmosphere, flickering practical light, off-screen sound cue |
| Protected identity | original character with broad genre archetype traits |
Boundary Rule
If the user's request is unsafe, refuse or redirect to a safe alternative. If it is safe but poorly worded, repair the wording. When uncertain, state the risk class and offer a conservative prompt that keeps the non-harmful scene function.
Do not provide filter-bypass, evasion, or hidden-word tactics. The safe path is to clarify production intent, remove unsafe identity or harm elements, and rewrite into an original authorized scene.
Face-limit or portrait-verification workarounds are not safe prompt tricks. If a surface offers sanctioned virtual portrait, trusted model-output, or authorization asset flows, route the user to those current official paths instead of evasion language.
Load [ref:filter-vocab] for safer substitutions. Load [ref:multilingual-community-examples] only when the safe repair needs Chinese/Russian/Japanese/Korean/Spanish or mixed-language wording for clarity.
Output Contract
Return likely trigger class, safer wording, final prompt, what changed, and any content boundary that still applies.