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
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.
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.
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.