Account safety before you file an individual lawsuit

    The biggest reason people hesitate on high-value matters is fear—not of losing, but of retaliation: a suspended Amazon account, a locked game profile, or a service ban. OysterClaim takes that seriously.

    Safe Harbor (what it means here)

    In partner individual lawsuits programs, some defendant companies agree to non-retaliation frameworks—contractual limits on punishing consumers for exercising their rights. OysterClaim only partners with matters where the partner law firm has secured or documented a strict non-retaliation framework and can point you to the actual language.

    OysterClaim does not guarantee outcomes or account status. We do commit to not routing you to partner intakes we have not vetted for a published Safe Harbor or equivalent non-retaliation commitment—and to showing that source before you leave the app.

    Class actions vs. firm intake

    Most settlements in Oyster's directory are court-supervised class actions filed on official administrator sites—separate from partner individual lawsuits intake. This page focuses on the latter, where account-retaliation questions come up most often.

    What you should still verify

    • Read the firm's intake page and engagement letter before submitting.
    • Confirm the matter matches your facts and jurisdiction.
    • Keep copies of what you file; Oyster stores filing helpers locally on your device.

    OysterClaim is not a law firm. Partner firms provide legal advice and representation. Questions about a specific matter belong to that firm's intake team.

    Class actions vs individual lawsuits (payouts) → · Law firms: partner intake →