CIPA · Website Consent

Stop Your Website From Inviting Lawsuits.

Businesses across the country are getting demand letters over the everyday trackers on their websites. We set up the protection that makes you a bad target, and we make sure it actually works.

The problem

The letter that looks like a lawsuit.

Right now, serial filers are mailing businesses letters that look like lawsuits. The claim is that your Google Analytics, your Meta pixel, your chat widget — all of it — capture visitor data without consent and break a decades-old privacy law. The demands run into the thousands. Most owners panic and pay.

You don't have to be one of them.

Why your privacy policy isn't enough

A policy discloses. It doesn't defend.

A privacy policy is paperwork. It tells people what you collect. It does not stop your trackers from firing the instant someone hits your page — which is the exact thing these letters target.

You need two things working together: the policy, and a consent banner that actually blocks the trackers until your visitor says yes. Most sites have neither set up correctly.

https://yourwebsite.com
ElementsConsoleSourcesNetwork
● RecordingFilter: trackerBefore consent · page load
google-analytics.com/g/collect200
connect.facebook.net/…/fbevents.js200
stats.g.doubleclick.net/j/collect200
js.hs-scripts.com/…/analytics.js200
widget.intercom.io/widget/…200
5 trackers fired before the user clicked anything.

This is what a filer sees before your visitor clicks anything. Your policy in the footer doesn't stop it — the data already left.

What you get

The whole defense, set up and running.

Auto-updating policy

Privacy and cookie policy built on Termageddon, so it stays current as laws change instead of going stale the day after you publish.

A real consent banner

Configured to block non-essential trackers until your visitor opts in. Not a banner that just sits there — one that does its job.

Firing verification

We test your site the same way a filer would, watching what fires before consent, and we don't stop until nothing leaks early.

Ongoing maintenance

Sites change. Tags creep back in. We keep watch so you stay protected.

Pricing

$200 one-time setup. $129/yr after.

That covers the policy, the consent tool, the configuration, the testing, and us keeping it running right.

Compare that to a single demand letter that asks for $5,000 — and counts every tracker as a separate hit.

Already have Termageddon?

You've paid for a tool. Let's make sure it's firing.

You've paid for a tool that might not be firing correctly — which is the part that actually matters. We'll audit it, fix the configuration, and confirm your trackers hold until consent.

Get started

Protect your website in a few minutes.

Grab the $200 setup + $129/yr package below. We'll take it from there.

FAQ

Answered.

Is this legal advice?+
No. We're a marketing and web team, not a law firm. We make your website technically sound. For legal questions about a specific letter, talk to an attorney.
I'm not in California. Does this apply to me?+
Yes. Most filers are in California and New York, but they target any business whose site gets visitors from those states. Roughly 28 states have similar laws, and federal law reaches everywhere. A website is enough.
Won't a new law fix this?+
California tried. A bill to exempt normal business tracking passed the state Senate unanimously, then stalled. Earliest possible relief is 2027, and it's not guaranteed. The letters are going out now.
What if I already got a letter?+
Don't panic and don't pay yet. Save it, don't change your site until you've preserved what it looks like now, and talk to a lawyer. Then call us to fix the underlying problem so it doesn't happen again.
Close

Be the target nobody wants.

The people sending these letters are betting you'll panic. The fix is cheaper than the panic, it runs in the background, and it makes you a target nobody wants. Let's set it up.