
Claim.Watch
Big Brands owe you money. This AI tool makes them pay.
45 followers
Big Brands owe you money. This AI tool makes them pay.
45 followers
$30 Billion in settlements goes unclaimed every year. Don't let Big Brands keep your money. Claim.Watch is an AI Agent swarm that turns your purchase history (e.g., Netflix, iPhone) into cash. It scans the deep web for hidden payouts, prioritizes easy "no proof needed" claims, and handles the boring part: auto-filling forms, applying required wet signatures, and auto-submitting instantly. Get paid for what you already bought.








@bartoszi does this work in Europe and Italy?
@ilovetapirs666 yes it works all over the world but settlements nowadays are more common in US (30B market in unclaimed money) - in Europe is becoming popular through GDPR / RODO settlements :)
Closer
interesting idea
@pdziedzicz thanks!!
Straighty.app
Sick!!! Love the idea
@lach_p Thank you so much - users seems to love it too :)
Hey Bartosz @bartoszi ,
Congrats on the launch of Claim.Watch! The idea of turning your purchase history into cash is really clever, and the fact that it simplifies the whole claims process is a huge win.
I'm curious, how’s the response been so far? Are you focusing on any specific marketing goals or strategies to get the word out? Would love to hear how things are shaping up for you!
@mfarhan1107 thanks! The response is amazing, seems that is one piece of puzzle was missing in classaction settlements really, im validation claim.watch in all spaces i lnow right now.
Hi @bartoszi !
Joined in out of curiosity with a monthly premium plan. Will see what will be the outcome. My first impression on the UI is quite positive.
Having said that, since I paid, I have to say the UX is a bit mixed. When browsing the potential claims, there is no distinction between those claim that are auto-submitted and those that one needs to submit personally. And out of those that turned out to be filed manually - a lot of pages are unavailable/not working. Some are past deadline despite the info on the claims listing. That makes the experience feeling a bit fake.
Do you plan to address those somewhat?