HolyCrab AI Video Trends / Answer
Seedance Negative Prompt Guardrails
Seedance negative prompt guardrails should remove copied source details, unsafe rights dependencies, unsupported claims, visual drift, and review failures before generation.
What negative prompt guardrails should Seedance prompts include?
Seedance negative prompt guardrails should name what must not appear in the output and what must not transfer from any source or reference. Start with rights guardrails: no copied celebrity or private-person likeness, protected characters, brand campaigns, logos, slogans, songs, voices, choreography, UI, captions, watermarks, or unsupported product claims unless authorized. Add quality guardrails for the specific job: no face drift, warped hands, unreadable product labels, unstable final frame, excessive camera shake, unwanted scene changes, inconsistent lighting, or off-brief audio timing. For third-party prompt inspiration, use guardrails to prevent the raw source's exact people, setting, movement, styling, text overlays, and final execution from leaking into the HolyCrab result. Then review the 4-8 second Seedance test against motion clarity, reference stability, final-frame usefulness, rights status, retry count, and cost per approved output.
Key takeaways
- Use rights guardrails before generation, not only after output review.
- Block copied likeness, brand, protected character, music, choreography, UI, and claims.
- Add job-specific quality exclusions for product, UGC, cinematic, audio, and reference tests.
- Say what must not transfer from each reference asset or third-party source.
- Measure guardrail quality by fewer rejects, lower retry cost, and safer approved clips.