Every import runs a scrub at the door. Landlines pulled, malformed numbers dropped, and known TCPA litigators quarantined before they ever join the list. Then the report prices the work in dollars kept.
One number on a purchased-adjacent list belongs to a professional TCPA plaintiff. The tools that let it in are the tools that fund the settlement.
Import from a CSV or the CRM. The scrub runs on every row before anything saves.
Landlines out, dead numbers out, professional plaintiffs quarantined. Clean rows land as contacts, pulled rows land in a banner you can read.
Numbers scrubbed, segments saved, dollars kept. The guardrails report their own value on the Command screen and in Reports.
Numbers tied to known TCPA plaintiffs get quarantined at import. No screen catches everything. This one catches the ones already on record.
Landlines pulled on import. Not one segment spent on a number that can't reply.
The savings report turns the scrub into a line item. Proof the guardrails earn their keep.
A dirty list costs three ways. Wasted segments, a bruised sender reputation, and the exposure a known plaintiff brings with them. The scrub charges nothing and cuts all three. Screening reduces the risk. It doesn't repeal the statute, and nothing does.
Left or right, Txtra is the sender your carriers trust and your lawyers approve.
Landlines, malformed numbers, and known TCPA litigators. Clean rows save as contacts. Pulled rows show in a banner with the reason.
A person who joins texting lists to sue the senders. The statute pays per message, and professional plaintiffs treat it as income. The quarantine keeps them off the list entirely.
No. It runs on every import on every plan. The scrub is part of the floor.