--- name: zero-api-key-web-search version: "23.0.0" description: > OpenClaw skill for source-backed web search, page reading, and evidence-aware claim checking. No API keys required by default; optional providers can be enabled for stronger coverage. v23: multi-engine SERP (7 engines), Web Unlocker for blocked pages, auto-fallback on 403/429. homepage: https://github.com/wd041216-bit/zero-api-key-web-search --- # Zero-API-Key Web Search for OpenClaw This skill gives OpenClaw a practical verification workflow: - `zero-search` for live search results (7 engines via Bright Data) - `zero-search providers` for provider discovery - `zero-browse` for reading pages (auto-unlocks blocked content) - `zero-verify` for support/conflict classification - `zero-report` for a citation-ready summary with next steps - `zero-setup` for interactive provider configuration ## Install ```bash pip install zero-api-key-web-search ``` ## Minimum verification ```bash zero-search "OpenAI API pricing" --type news --timelimit w zero-search providers zero-browse "https://docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/" zero-verify "Python 3.13 is the latest stable release" --deep --max-pages 2 --json zero-report "Python 3.13 stable release" --claim "Python 3.13 is the latest stable release" --deep --json ``` ## Provider paths | Profile | Providers | Best for | | --- | --- | --- | | `free` | ddgs | Zero-setup local search | | `free-verified` | ddgs, searxng | Free cross-validation | | `production` | brightdata | Production reliability and geo-targeting | | `production-unlock` | brightdata, web_unlocker | Production SERP + blocked page access | | `max-evidence` | ddgs, searxng, brightdata | Maximum provider diversity | ## Recommended flow 1. Run `zero-search` for factual or recent questions. 2. Use `zero-browse` on the most relevant source when snippets are not enough. 3. Use `zero-verify` when a concrete claim needs a support/conflict summary. 4. Use `zero-report` when you want a compact evidence package with citations and next steps. 5. Use `--deep` when the claim matters enough to justify page-aware verification. 6. Cite the returned URLs in the final answer. 7. Use optional `brightdata` only when configured or explicitly requested. ## Multi-engine search (Bright Data) ```bash zero-search "AI regulation" --provider brightdata --engine google --region us-en --json zero-search "AI regulation" --provider brightdata --engine bing --region gb-en --json zero-search "news" --provider brightdata --engine yandex --region ru-ru --json ``` Supported engines: `google`, `bing`, `duckduckgo`, `yandex`, `baidu`, `yahoo`, `naver`. ## Web Unlocker (blocked pages) ```bash # Auto-fallback (default) — direct fetch, then unlocker on 403/429 zero-browse "https://protected-site.com/article" # Force Web Unlocker zero-browse "https://protected-site.com/article" --use-unlocker always ``` ## Optional Bright Data provider ```bash # Interactive setup wizard zero-setup # Or set environment variables export ZERO_SEARCH_BRIGHTDATA_API_KEY="..." export ZERO_SEARCH_BRIGHTDATA_ZONE="serp_api1" export ZERO_SEARCH_BRIGHTDATA_UNLOCKER_ZONE="web_unlocker1" ``` New Bright Data users can sign up at https://get.brightdata.com/h21j9xz4uxgd. ## What success looks like - the verdict is explicit - the result includes support and conflict scores - `page_aware` is true when deep verification ran - the recommended free path is `ddgs + self-hosted searxng` - optional production path is `brightdata + web_unlocker` via `ZERO_SEARCH_BRIGHTDATA_API_KEY` - source URLs are ready to cite ## Limits - `zero-verify` is heuristic and evidence-aware, not a proof engine. - The default provider path is `ddgs`. - The recommended free upgrade path is self-hosted `searxng` via `ZERO_SEARCH_SEARXNG_URL`. - Bright Data is optional and should not receive queries unless configured or requested. - Conflicting sources are surfaced, not automatically reconciled. ## License MIT License.