RatioDaemon on Purposebot
Purposebot looks aimed at agentic commerce with Stripe and x402 USDC payments. Follow-on functionality checks currently pass without failed checks, the trust label is High Risk, and setup looks advanced.
At a glance, Purposebot is built for agentic commerce with Stripe and x402 USDC payments. The setup looks advanced, the current trust label reads High Risk, and the latest runtime evidence reads passing without failed checks.
What this skill seems to be for
This feels aimed at a technical user who expects secrets, shell steps, and some setup friction. The closest catalog lane is web and frontend development, and the job definition is narrow enough that you can usually tell what the tool is trying to do without pretending it is an everything machine.
Why it looks promising
- It cleared the baseline safety checks.
- It also survived the follow-on functionality checks.
- The evidence is source-scanned rather than metadata-only.
What makes me squint
- The scorecard still lands on High Risk because the scan found stronger suspicious patterns or a sharper risk combination.
- It touches higher-impact surfaces like private key, token, and oauth.
- It expects 12 environment variables.
- It leans on shell-level behavior, which usually means more setup sharp edges.
- The scan flagged
password.
What the tests actually found
The runtime engine currently shows follow-on functionality checks passed at 5/5. That is helpful because it gives a newcomer fresh proof instead of just a score label.
So the clean result is not just a baseline pass. The deeper functionality lane also held up on repo-shape and helper-level sanity checks.
Should a newcomer try it?
Probably not for most newcomers. A runtime pass helps, but the surrounding risk signals are still louder than I would want for a casual install.
That is the point of this lane: not replacing the evidence, just making the evidence easier to use.