# task +subscribe-event > **Prerequisites:** Please read `../lark-shared/SKILL.md` to understand authentication, global parameters, and security rules. > > **⚠️ Note:** This API supports both `user` and `bot` identities. Use `user` to subscribe the current user's accessible tasks; use `bot` to subscribe tasks the **application is responsible for**. Subscribe task update events with the current identity. This shortcut is different from `event +subscribe`: - `task +subscribe-event` registers task-event access for the **current identity** - with `--as user`, it subscribes the **current user** to task events for tasks they created, are responsible for, or follow - with `--as bot`, it subscribes using the **application identity** for tasks the application is responsible for The task event type is: ```text task.task.update_user_access_v2 ``` Within this event, task changes are represented by commit types (string values). Deduped list: ```text task_assignees_update task_completed_update task_create task_deleted task_desc_update task_followers_update task_reminders_update task_start_due_update task_summary_update ``` Event payload shape (example): ```json { "event_id": "evt_xxx", "event_types": ["task_summary_update"], "task_guid": "task_guid_xxx", "timestamp": "1775793266152", "type": "task.task.update_user_access_v2" } ``` - `type`: event type, should be `task.task.update_user_access_v2` - `event_id`: unique event id (useful for dedup) - `event_types`: list of commit types (see the deduped list above) - `task_guid`: the task GUID that changed - `timestamp`: event timestamp (ms) In practice, this means: - with `--as user`, the subscribed user can receive updates for tasks visible to them through authorship, assignment, or following - with `--as bot`, the subscription covers tasks the application is responsible for To actually receive the subscribed events, use the standard event WebSocket receiver: ```bash lark-cli event +subscribe --event-types task.task.update_user_access_v2 --compact --quiet ``` The full flow is: 1. Register the subscription with `lark-cli task +subscribe-event [--as user|bot]` 2. Receive those events with `lark-cli event +subscribe --event-types task.task.update_user_access_v2 ...` ## Recommended Commands ```bash lark-cli task +subscribe-event ``` # Subscribe with app identity lark-cli task +subscribe-event --as bot ## Parameters This shortcut has no additional parameters. ## Workflow 1. Confirm whether the user wants to subscribe with `user` identity or `bot` identity. 2. Execute `lark-cli task +subscribe-event` 3. Report whether the subscription succeeded, and clarify which identity the subscription applies to. > [!CAUTION] > This is a **Write Operation** -- You must confirm the user's intent before executing.