skills/seedance-copyright/SKILL.md
This skill should be used when a Seedance 2.0 prompt mentions named characters, franchises, studios, celebrities, public figures, private people, brand logos, copyrighted scenes, songs, voices, or real-person likeness workflows and needs an IP-safe rewrite.
npx skillsauth add emily2040/seedance-2.0 seedance-copyrightInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Use this before finalizing prompts involving protected IP, named brands, public figures, private people, voices, logos, songs, studios, exact scenes, or lookalike character requests. The goal is not to dilute the idea; the goal is to preserve the creative function with original, authorized, and safer production language.
The user pointing at protected work is not trying to steal - they are showing you the clearest example of what they love that exists. The job is to find what the love is made of and give it back as something safely theirs. Protect the rights-holder and the user's heart in the same move.
Preserve the scene function, genre, mood, camera logic, emotional beat, and production intent. Replace protected identity with an original archetype, original costume logic, original world details, and descriptive style layers.
| Risk | Replace with | |---|---| | Named character or franchise | Original archetype, genre function, and non-identical costume language | | Studio or living-creator style | Medium, texture, palette, composition, line quality, and motion rhythm | | Celebrity or private person | Original performer description or authorized reference workflow | | Brand logo | Generic product mark, blank label, or user-owned brand if explicitly authorized | | Song, voice, or performance | Tempo, energy, instrumentation, mood, or newly composed sound direction | | Exact scene recreation | Original scene with similar narrative function and different setting/blocking |
If the user clearly owns the brand, asset, or likeness rights, keep the authorized elements but still preserve them with explicit constraints. If authorization is unclear, ask a short confirmation or provide a safe original rewrite. Do not assume rights from an uploaded image, song, or video.
For real human faces, portraits, or voices, separate three questions: does the active surface support the input, does the user have authorization, and does the prompt avoid imitation of a public figure or private person without consent. Some surfaces use verified virtual portrait assets or authorization flows; do not collapse those into a universal allow or deny rule.
Instead of a named superhero swinging through a recognizable franchise city, write: original masked rooftop courier in a red weatherproof jacket leaps between rain-slick buildings, low handheld tracking camera, blue police lights far below, no logos or franchise symbols.
Return risk category, what was changed, safe replacement prompt, authorization requirement, and any residual constraints.
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This skill should be used when an English Seedance 2.0 prompt is slop-heavy, generic, padded with empty quality words, tripping false-positive filters, or needs precise English production vocabulary for camera, lighting, motion, VFX, audio, and constraints.
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This skill should be used when the user asks for Chinese Seedance 2.0 prompt wording, Mandarin cinematic vocabulary, Chinese prompt compression, or translation of camera, lighting, action, VFX, audio, and production terms into Chinese.
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This skill should be used when the user asks for Russian Seedance 2.0 prompt wording, Russian cinematic vocabulary, or translation of camera, lighting, action, VFX, audio, and production terms into Russian.
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This skill should be used when the user asks for Korean Seedance 2.0 prompt wording, Korean cinematic vocabulary, or translation of camera, lighting, action, VFX, audio, and production terms into Korean.