← Back to Skills Marketplace
liamnichols

iCloud Find My

by liamnichols · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0
cross-platform ⚠ suspicious
3002
Downloads
6
Stars
4
Active Installs
4
Versions
Install in OpenClaw
/install icloud-findmy
Description
Query Find My locations and battery status for family devices via iCloud.
README (SKILL.md)

iCloud Find My

Access Find My device locations and battery status via the iCloud CLI (pyicloud).

Setup

  1. Install pyicloud:
brew install pipx
pipx install pyicloud
  1. Authenticate (one-time):

Ask the user for their Apple ID, then run:

icloud --username [email protected] --with-family --list

They'll need to enter their password and complete 2FA. The session will be saved and lasts 1-2 months.

  1. Store Apple ID:

Add the Apple ID to your TOOLS.md or workspace config so you remember it for future queries:

## iCloud Find My
Apple ID: [email protected]

Usage

List all devices

icloud --username APPLE_ID --with-family --list

Output format:

------------------------------
Name           - Liam's iPhone
Display Name   - iPhone 15 Pro
Location       - {'latitude': 52.248, 'longitude': 0.761, 'timeStamp': 1767810759054, ...}
Battery Level  - 0.72
Battery Status - NotCharging
Device Class   - iPhone
------------------------------

Parsing tips:

  • Devices are separated by ------------------------------
  • Location is a Python dict (use eval() or parse with regex)
  • Battery Level is 0.0-1.0 (multiply by 100 for percentage)
  • Battery Status: "Charging" or "NotCharging"
  • Location fields: latitude, longitude, timeStamp (milliseconds), horizontalAccuracy

Get specific device

Find a specific device by grepping the output:

icloud --username APPLE_ID --with-family --list | grep -A 10 "iPhone"

Parse location

Extract and format location data:

icloud --username APPLE_ID --with-family --list | \
  grep -A 10 "Device Name" | \
  grep "Location" | \
  sed "s/Location.*- //"

Then parse the Python dict string with Python or extract coordinates with regex.

Parse battery

icloud --username APPLE_ID --with-family --list | \
  grep -A 10 "Device Name" | \
  grep "Battery Level"

Device Names

Device names come from iCloud and may include:

  • Fancy Unicode apostrophes (U+2019 ') instead of ASCII '
  • No apostrophes at all (e.g., "Lindas iPhone")

Use case-insensitive matching and normalize apostrophes if needed.

Session Management

  • Sessions last 1-2 months
  • Stored in user's home directory
  • When expired, re-run the authentication step
  • PyiCloud validates automatically on each request

Common Patterns

Check battery before going out:

# Get battery for specific device
icloud --username ID --with-family --list | \
  grep -B 2 -A 5 "iPhone" | \
  grep "Battery Level"

Get current location:

# Extract location dict and parse coordinates
icloud --username ID --with-family --list | \
  grep -A 10 "iPhone" | \
  grep "Location" | \
  sed "s/.*- //" | \
  python3 -c "import sys; loc = eval(sys.stdin.read()); print(f\"{loc['latitude']}, {loc['longitude']}\")"

Check if device is charging:

icloud --username ID --with-family --list | \
  grep -A 10 "iPhone" | \
  grep "Battery Status"

Proactive Use Cases

  • Battery warnings: Check battery levels before calendar events (going out)
  • Location context: Answer "near me" queries by checking user's current location
  • Home/away detection: Check if user is at home based on coordinates
  • Low battery alerts: Warn if battery \x3C30% and not charging

Troubleshooting

Authentication errors:

  • Session expired - re-authenticate
  • Wrong Apple ID - check stored ID
  • 2FA required - complete 2FA flow

No location available:

  • Device offline
  • Find My disabled
  • Location Services off

Device not found:

  • Check exact device name with --list
  • Names are case-sensitive
  • May have Unicode apostrophes

Notes

  • Requires macOS (iCloud API quirks)
  • Family Sharing must be enabled to see family devices
  • Location updates every ~1-5 minutes when device is active
  • Battery readings may be cached (check timestamp)
Usage Guidance
This skill is coherent with its stated purpose but has privacy and safety issues you should consider before installing: 1) It asks you to run a local CLI (pyicloud) that will prompt for your Apple ID, password, and 2FA — those credentials create session tokens stored on disk for 1–2 months. Treat those tokens as sensitive. 2) Do not store your password in TOOLS.md or any plaintext workspace file; storing the Apple ID is lower risk but may still reveal personal info. 3) The SKILL.md suggests using Python eval() to parse CLI output — avoid eval() on untrusted text and use a safe parser instead. 4) Confirm you trust the PyiCloud package source (pipx install) and that you want an agent that can run local shell commands. If you proceed, prefer manual authentication, avoid persisting secrets in shared workspaces, and inspect the PyiCloud package release on GitHub before installing.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: icloud-findmy Version: 1.0.0 The skill is classified as suspicious primarily due to the instruction in `SKILL.md` to use `eval()` on parsed output from the `icloud` CLI. While the immediate intent appears to be benign (parsing a Python dictionary string for location data), `eval()` is an inherently dangerous function when used with input that could potentially be controlled or manipulated by an external source. This instruction teaches the AI agent a risky pattern, creating a potential code injection vulnerability if the `icloud` CLI output could ever be maliciously crafted (e.g., via a compromised device name or location data).
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The skill's claimed purpose (querying Find My via PyiCloud) aligns with the instructions to install and run the `icloud` CLI. Minor inconsistency: registry metadata lists no required binaries or credentials, but SKILL.md metadata and the runtime instructions explicitly require the `icloud` binary (pyicloud) and an Apple ID for authentication.
Instruction Scope
Instructions direct the agent to prompt for the user's Apple ID and run local CLI commands that create long-lived sessions. They also recommend storing the Apple ID in TOOLS.md/workspace config and advise using Python's eval() to parse CLI output — eval() on any string is dangerous and storing identifiers in workspace files can leak sensitive info to other skills or collaborators. The instructions don't direct data to external endpoints, but they do encourage persistent local storage of sensitive authentication state.
Install Mechanism
No install spec in the registry (instruction-only), but SKILL.md recommends using Homebrew + pipx to install pyicloud — both are common, legitimate package managers. There are no downloads from unknown URLs or extract steps. Platform is macOS-only (declared), which matches the brew-based install instructions.
Credentials
The skill requires interactive Apple ID credentials and 2FA to work, but the registry declares no primary credential or required env vars. The SKILL.md instructs storing the Apple ID in workspace files (TOOLS.md), which is disproportionate and increases leakage risk. The skill does not request passwords as env vars (the CLI prompts), but persistent session tokens are created on disk for 1–2 months — this is a sensitive artifact that should be considered before installation.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill is not always-enabled and does not request elevated platform privileges. It relies on PyiCloud's session files stored in the user's home directory (described in the doc), which is normal for this tool. The skill does not attempt to modify other skills or global agent settings.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install icloud-findmy
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /icloud-findmy
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Complete rewrite: Pure documentation skill, no code dependencies. Agent uses icloud CLI directly.
v0.0.3
Test: Renamed bin to scripts
v0.0.2
Fix: Include bin/ directory with Python script
v0.0.1
Initial release - location and battery tracking for iCloud Find My devices
Metadata
Slug icloud-findmy
Version 1.0.0
License
All-time Installs 4
Active Installs 4
Total Versions 4
Frequently Asked Questions

What is iCloud Find My?

Query Find My locations and battery status for family devices via iCloud. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 3002 downloads so far.

How do I install iCloud Find My?

Run "/install icloud-findmy" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is iCloud Find My free?

Yes, iCloud Find My is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does iCloud Find My support?

iCloud Find My is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created iCloud Find My?

It is built and maintained by liamnichols (@liamnichols); the current version is v1.0.0.

💬 Comments