ProofAudit.

For demand-letter recipients

The letter names your website. Here's what actually helps.

You're one of roughly 4,000 US businesses this year[2]. The panic-purchases — overlay widgets, scan subscriptions — don't resolve these situations. Documented, verified remediation does. That's a two-step job: prove what's broken, then fix it and prove that too.

Three verified issues from your homepage within two business days — the same evidence format your attorney will ask for.

The first two weeks, in order

01 · Attorney first

Respond through counsel, not directly. Deadlines in these letters are real. We are not lawyers and this page is not legal advice — your attorney owns strategy.

02 · Get the evidence

An audit establishes exactly what's broken on a representative sample of your site — each finding re-executed, screenshotted, timestamped. Your developer gets a fix list; your attorney gets a clean technical record.

03 · Fix, then prove the fix

Your developer works down the list; our re-test (25% of the audit fee) re-executes every finding and documents the before/after. Dated proof of good-faith remediation.

What we never do: predict case outcomes, interpret the law, or promise the suit goes away. We make the technical half of the problem — usually the whole reason the letter exists — provably fixed.

Why proof matters more for you than anyone

  • Opposing counsel will test claims. A scan-dump PDF invites argument; a finding with method, timestamp, and screenshot doesn't.
  • Fast: 5–10 business days from kickoff — these situations run on deadlines.
  • Fixed price: $125/page, typically $1,250–$2,750. Quote before you commit.
  • Already running a widget? 983 widget-equipped sites were sued in 2025 anyway[2] — see what the widget isn't covering.

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