法律核心要素:一人企业与知识产权保护 - Openclaw Skills
作者:互联网
2026-04-15
什么是 法律核心要素?
法律核心要素是 Openclaw Skills 的基础模块,旨在弥合技术执行与商业保护之间的鸿沟。它为开发者和一人企业主提供了一种结构化的方法,通过选择正确的业务实体(如 LLC 或 S-Corp)并建立严格的合同标准来保护其资产。该技能通过提供起草客户服务协议、保密协议(NDA)和隐私正策所需的逻辑,帮助用户超越口头协议。
除了简单的文档记录,该技能还关注长期的商业健康,教育用户如何避免“揭穿公司面纱”,以及如何保护代码和品牌标识等宝贵的知识产权。它作为一份技术路线图,帮助用户在无需承担昂贵法律咨询费用的情况下处理复杂的商业法律,确保 Openclaw Skills 用户从第一天起就保持合规并受到保护。
下载入口:https://github.com/openclaw/skills/tree/main/skills/jk-0001/legal-essentials
安装与下载
1. ClawHub CLI
从源直接安装技能的最快方式。
npx clawhub@latest install legal-essentials
2. 手动安装
将技能文件夹复制到以下位置之一
全局模式~/.openclaw/skills/
工作区
/skills/
优先级:工作区 > 本地 > 内置
3. 提示词安装
将此提示词复制到 OpenClaw 即可自动安装。
请帮我使用 Clawhub 安装 legal-essentials。如果尚未安装 Clawhub,请先安装(npm i -g clawhub)。
法律核心要素 应用场景
- 建立新的 LLC 或 S-Corp,保护个人资产免受商业负债影响。
- 为服务条款和隐私正策等基本的网站法律文件生成清单。
- 随着收入增长,引导从个体工商户向正式企业结构的转型。
- 通过版权和商标工作流保护软件源代码和品牌 Logo。
- 在扩大自由职业者团队时,起草独立承包商协议。
- 评估当前的业务阶段、收入和风险状况,推荐最适合的法律结构。
- 指导用户完成实体成立的行政要求,包括获得 EIN(雇主识别号)和州正府备案。
- 根据用户经营的是 SaaS、机构还是产品业务,识别所需的特定合同集。
- 提供逐步的知识产权审计,确定哪些资产需要正式的商标或版权注册。
- 执行责任检查,确保个人和商业财务严格分离,以维持法律保护。
法律核心要素 配置指南
要将法律核心要素集成到您的本地环境,请在 Openclaw Skills 框架内使用以下命令:
openclaw add legal-essentials
安装完成后,您可以通过向智能体提供当前的业务状态和管辖区详情来触发法律工作流。
法律核心要素 数据架构与分类体系
该技能使用结构化分类法组织法律元数据和业务实体信息:
| 类别 | 描述 |
|---|---|
| 实体元数据 | 存储成立州、EIN 和运营协议状态。 |
| 合同库 | 跟踪服务条款、隐私正策和保密协议的模板与版本。 |
| 知识产权登记 | 编目商标、版权和申请时间线。 |
| 合规日志 | 记录年度报告截止日期和税务选举状态。 |
| 责任审计 | 维护保鲜单和公司形式日志的清单。 |
name: legal-essentials
description: Understand and handle essential legal matters for a solopreneur business. Use when forming a business entity, protecting intellectual property, writing contracts, understanding liability, or navigating basic legal requirements. Covers business structure selection, contracts and terms of service, IP protection basics, and when to hire a lawyer. Not legal advice — consult a lawyer for specific situations. Trigger on "legal", "business entity", "LLC", "contracts", "terms of service", "intellectual property", "liability", "legal protection".
Legal Essentials
Overview
Legal issues aren't sexy, but they protect your business and personal assets. Most solopreneurs ignore legal until it's too late — then one lawsuit or contract dispute wipes them out. This playbook covers the absolute essentials: business structure, contracts, IP protection, and liability. Disclaimer: This is educational content, not legal advice. Consult a lawyer for your specific situation.
Step 1: Choose Your Business Structure
Your business structure affects taxes, liability, and paperwork. Pick the right one from day one.
Structure comparison (U.S.):
| Structure | Liability Protection | Tax Treatment | Complexity | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sole Proprietorship | ? None (personal assets at risk) | Pass-through (report on personal tax) | Very Low | Testing an idea, no risk |
| LLC (Single-member) | ? Yes (separates personal/business) | Pass-through (default) | Low-Medium | Most solopreneurs |
| LLC (Multi-member) | ? Yes | Pass-through (partnership) | Medium | Partnerships |
| S-Corp | ? Yes | Pass-through (with payroll requirements) | Medium-High | Higher revenue ($100K+ profit) |
| C-Corp | ? Yes | Double taxation (corp + personal) | High | Raising VC funding |
Decision tree:
- Revenue < $50K/year, just starting → Sole Proprietorship (simplest, but no liability protection)
- Revenue $50K-100K/year, want liability protection → LLC (most common for solopreneurs)
- Profit > $100K/year, want to save on self-employment tax → S-Corp (requires payroll)
- Planning to raise VC funding → C-Corp (required by most investors)
LLC benefits:
- Separates personal assets from business liabilities (if sued, they can't take your house)
- Simple to set up ($50-500 depending on state)
- Flexible tax treatment (can elect S-Corp status later)
- Professional credibility (clients prefer working with LLCs vs sole proprietors)
How to form an LLC:
- Choose a business name (check availability in your state)
- File Articles of Organization with your state (online, $50-500 fee)
- Get an EIN (Employer Identification Number) from IRS (free, online)
- Open a business bank account (use EIN, not SSN)
- Create an Operating Agreement (even if single-member — Google templates)
Timeline: 1-2 weeks. Use a service like LegalZoom or Northwest Registered Agent if you want help (~$300 total).
Step 2: Contracts and Agreements
Verbal agreements are worthless. Everything business-related should have a written contract.
Essential contracts for solopreneurs:
1. Client Service Agreement (for service businesses)
Use whenever you do work for a client. Covers:
- Scope of work (what you'll deliver)
- Timeline and deadlines
- Payment terms (amount, schedule, late fees)
- Revisions or change requests (how many included, cost for additional)
- Termination clause (how either party can end the contract)
- Liability limitations (cap damages at contract value)
- IP ownership (who owns the work product)
Template sources: Bonsai, HoneyBook, or a lawyer (~$500-1,500 for a custom template you can reuse).
2. Terms of Service / Terms and Conditions (for SaaS or products)
Required on your website if you sell a product or service. Covers:
- What your service does and doesn't do
- User responsibilities (acceptable use policy)
- Payment terms and refund policy
- Limitation of liability (you're not liable for indirect damages)
- Dispute resolution (arbitration vs. court)
Template sources: Termly, TermsFeed (free generators), or Bonsai (~$200-500 for lawyer review).
3. Privacy Policy (required if you collect ANY user data)
Legally required in most jurisdictions if you collect emails, names, or any personal data. Covers:
- What data you collect
- How you use it
- Who you share it with (e.g., email service providers)
- How users can request deletion (GDPR compliance)
Template sources: Termly, TermsFeed (free generators), or lawyer review (~$200-500).
4. Independent Contractor Agreement (if you hire contractors)
Use whenever you hire a freelancer or contractor. Covers:
- Scope of work
- Payment terms
- IP ownership (you own the work, not them)
- Confidentiality (they can't share your business info)
- Independent contractor status (they're not an employee — important for taxes)
Template sources: Bonsai, or lawyer template (~$300-500).
5. Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) (if sharing sensitive info)
Use when discussing your idea, product, or business details with potential partners, investors, or contractors. Covers:
- What information is confidential
- How long the NDA lasts
- Exceptions (publicly available info)
Template sources: Bonsai, or lawyer template (~$200).
Step 3: Protect Your Intellectual Property (IP)
Your IP (brand, content, code, designs) is often your most valuable asset. Protect it.
IP types and how to protect:
1. Trademarks (brand names, logos)
- What: Protects your business name and logo from copycats
- When to file: When you have revenue and a brand worth protecting ($50K+ revenue recommended)
- How: File with USPTO (U.S. Patent and Trademark Office) — DIY (
$250-400) or use a lawyer ($1,000-2,000) - Timeline: 6-12 months to approval
2. Copyrights (written content, code, designs)
- What: Protects original creative works (blog posts, software code, graphics)
- When to file: Optional (you automatically own copyright when you create something), but filing gives you stronger legal standing if you sue
- How: File with U.S. Copyright Office — DIY (~$45-65 online)
- Timeline: 3-6 months
3. Patents (inventions, processes)
- What: Protects novel inventions or processes
- When to file: Rarely relevant for solopreneurs (expensive, complex, long process)
- How: Hire a patent lawyer (~$5,000-15,000+)
- Timeline: 2-3 years
For most solopreneurs: Trademark your brand name once you have traction. Copyright registration is optional (you already own it). Skip patents unless you have a truly novel invention and funding.
Cheapest IP protection: Use "?" symbol next to your brand name even before filing (shows intent to trademark). Put "? [Year] [Your Name/Company]" on your website footer (establishes copyright claim).
Step 4: Limit Your Liability
Mistakes happen. Protect yourself from catastrophic financial loss.
Liability protection strategies:
1. Use an LLC or Corp
Separates personal assets from business liabilities. If your business gets sued, they can't take your house, car, or savings (unless you pierce the corporate veil — see below).
2. Get business insurance
- General Liability Insurance: Covers bodily injury, property damage, personal injury. Cost: $300-1,000/year. Recommended for: anyone with in-person customers or physical operations.
- Professional Liability Insurance (E&O): Covers mistakes, negligence, failure to deliver. Cost: $500-2,000/year. Recommended for: consultants, freelancers, service providers.
- Cyber Liability Insurance: Covers data breaches, hacking. Cost: $1,000-3,000/year. Recommended for: SaaS, anyone handling customer data.
Where to buy: Hiscox, Next Insurance, Embroker (online, instant quotes).
3. Include limitation of liability clauses in contracts
Cap your liability at the value of the contract. Example: "In no event shall liability exceed the total amount paid under this agreement."
4. Don't pierce the corporate veil
If you have an LLC or Corp, keep business and personal finances SEPARATE. Don't:
- Pay personal expenses from business account
- Mix business and personal funds
- Fail to maintain corporate formalities (annual reports, separate accounts)
If you mix them, a court can "pierce the veil" and hold you personally liable.
Step 5: Know When to Hire a Lawyer
DIY works for many legal tasks. But some situations require a lawyer.
When to DIY (use templates):
- Forming an LLC in a simple state (Delaware, Wyoming, Nevada)
- Standard client contracts (if using vetted templates)
- Privacy policy and terms of service (if using reliable generators)
When to hire a lawyer:
- You're sued or threatened with a lawsuit → hire immediately
- Complex contracts (partnerships, investor agreements, large client deals)
- IP disputes (someone copied your product, trademark infringement)
- Employment issues (if you hire employees, not just contractors)
- Regulatory compliance (if you operate in a heavily regulated industry — finance, healthcare, etc.)
How to find a lawyer:
- Ask other entrepreneurs for referrals
- Use Avvo or Martindale to search by specialty
- For one-off questions: use UpCounsel or Rocket Lawyer (pay per question, $100-500)
Cost expectations:
- Consultation: $200-500/hour
- Contract drafting: $500-2,000
- Lawsuit defense: $5,000-50,000+ (depends on complexity)
Rule: Spend $500-1,000 early on solid contracts and structure. It's far cheaper than fixing a legal mess later.
Step 6: Understand Common Legal Risks (and How to Avoid Them)
Risk 1: Not having terms of service → Someone uses your product in a harmful way, sues you for damages. Solution: Post terms of service on your site. Include liability limitations.
Risk 2: Not having client contracts → Client refuses to pay, claims you didn't deliver what was promised. Solution: Always use written contracts. No handshake deals.
Risk 3: Hiring contractors as employees → IRS reclassifies them as employees, you owe back taxes and penalties. Solution: Use independent contractor agreements. Don't control their schedule or method.
Risk 4: Violating GDPR or privacy laws → Fines for mishandling user data (up to 4% of revenue under GDPR). Solution: Post a privacy policy. Don't sell user data. Allow data deletion requests.
Risk 5: Using copyrighted content without permission → Get sued for copyright infringement. Solution: Only use content you created, purchased, or that's licensed (Creative Commons, stock photos).
Legal Mistakes to Avoid
- Operating as sole proprietor when you should have an LLC. One lawsuit can bankrupt you personally.
- Not having written contracts. Verbal agreements are impossible to enforce.
- Mixing personal and business finances. Pierces the corporate veil, exposes personal assets.
- Copying someone else's content, code, or designs. Copyright infringement lawsuits are expensive.
- Not posting terms of service or privacy policy. Leaves you exposed to lawsuits and regulatory fines.
- Hiring contractors without agreements. IRS can reclassify them as employees, costing you thousands in back taxes.
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