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Legal and Compliance

Last updated July 1, 2026.
Not legal advice. Corridorẽ is a market-analysis tool, not a law firm, and nothing on this page is legal advice or a substitute for advice from licensed counsel. The crash data reference below is general information that changes over time and varies by jurisdiction. You are responsible for confirming the rules that apply to you and for your own compliance with all applicable federal, state, and professional-conduct laws.

Terms of Use

These Terms of Use govern your access to and use of Corridorẽ, a subscription platform that analyzes public crash data and outdoor-advertising records to produce aggregate ad-placement intelligence. By creating an account or using Corridorẽ you agree to these terms. If you do not agree, do not use the service.

The service

Corridorẽ ranks locations and advertising placements using aggregated crash statistics, public sign-permit records, and inputs you provide. Corridorẽ outputs geography, timing, scoring, and placement recommendations. Corridorẽ does not provide, and is not designed to provide, lists of identifiable crash victims or their contact information, and it is not a lead-generation or client-solicitation product.

Eligibility and accounts

You must be a business or professional using Corridorẽ for lawful commercial purposes, be at least eighteen years old, and provide accurate account information. You are responsible for activity under your account and for keeping your credentials secure.

Your responsibilities

  • You will comply with all applicable laws, including the federal Driver's Privacy Protection Act (DPPA, 18 U.S.C. 2721 to 2725), the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA, 15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.), the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA, 47 U.S.C. 227), CAN-SPAM, and all state analogues.
  • You will comply with the rules of professional conduct that apply to you, including attorney-advertising and anti-solicitation rules such as ABA Model Rules 7.1 through 7.3 and 5.4 and their state equivalents, and any post-incident solicitation waiting periods.
  • You will not use Corridorẽ, or any data obtained through it, to identify, contact, or solicit individual crash victims, or to re-identify individuals from aggregate data.
  • You will not scrape, resell, sublicense, or redistribute Corridorẽ data except as expressly permitted in a written agreement.

No legal advice; independent judgment

Corridorẽ is an analytical tool. Scores, rankings, and recommendations are informational, are relative within a data set, and do not constitute legal, financial, or media-buying advice. You are solely responsible for your business, advertising, and compliance decisions.

Intellectual property

Corridorẽ, its software, scoring methods, and interfaces are owned by Vertical Growth LLC and are provided under a limited, revocable, non-exclusive, non-transferable license for your internal business use during your subscription. Underlying public data sets are owned by their respective sources.

Disclaimer of warranties

Corridorẽ is provided on an "as is" and "as available" basis without warranties of any kind, express or implied, including merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, non-infringement, and any warranty as to accuracy, completeness, timeliness, or availability of data. Public data may contain errors, gaps, and reporting lags. You use Corridorẽ at your own risk.

Limitation of liability

To the maximum extent permitted by law, Vertical Growth LLC and its affiliates, officers, and agents will not be liable for any indirect, incidental, special, consequential, exemplary, or punitive damages, or for any lost profits, revenue, data, or goodwill, arising from or related to your use of Corridorẽ. Our total aggregate liability for any claim arising from or related to Corridorẽ will not exceed the amounts you paid to us for the service in the twelve months preceding the event giving rise to the claim.

Indemnification

You will indemnify, defend, and hold harmless Vertical Growth LLC and its affiliates, officers, and agents from and against any claims, damages, liabilities, penalties, and costs (including reasonable attorneys' fees) arising from your use of Corridorẽ, your data inputs, or your violation of these terms or of any law, including the DPPA, FCRA, TCPA, or applicable professional-conduct rules.

Termination

We may suspend or terminate access for any violation of these terms or applicable law. Provisions that by their nature should survive termination will survive.

Subscriptions, fees, and renewal

Corridorẽ is sold on a subscription basis under the plan and pricing in your order or account. Fees are billed in advance, are non-refundable except where required by law or stated in writing, and subscriptions renew automatically for successive terms unless cancelled before renewal. We may change pricing with notice effective at your next renewal. Taxes are your responsibility where applicable.

California users

Under California Civil Code section 1789.3, California users of the service are entitled to the following consumer rights notice: complaints regarding the service or requests to receive further information regarding use of the service may be sent to the contact information in the Contact Us section below, or to the Complaint Assistance Unit of the Division of Consumer Services of the California Department of Consumer Affairs, in writing at 1625 North Market Blvd., Suite N 112, Sacramento, CA 95834, or by telephone at (800) 952-5210. California privacy rights are described in the California Notices section of this page.

Third-party services and data

Corridorẽ draws on public data sources and third-party services, including state transportation records, federal crash data, sign-permit inventories, and mapping providers. Those sources are owned and controlled by their publishers, may change or become unavailable without notice, and are subject to their own terms. We are not responsible for the accuracy or availability of third-party sources, and nothing in the service grants you rights in them beyond what their publishers allow.

Feedback

If you send us suggestions, ideas, or feedback about the service, we may use them without restriction or obligation to you, and you grant us a perpetual, irrevocable, royalty-free license to do so.

General provisions

If any provision of these terms is held unenforceable, the remainder stays in effect and the provision is enforced to the maximum extent permitted. Our failure to enforce a provision is not a waiver of it. You may not assign these terms without our written consent; we may assign them in connection with a merger, acquisition, or sale of assets. We are not liable for delay or failure caused by events beyond our reasonable control. Notices to us must go to the contact addresses on this page; notices to you may go to your account email. These terms, together with the Privacy Policy, the Acceptable Use Policy, and your order, are the entire agreement between you and us regarding the service, and provisions that by their nature should survive termination survive, including intellectual property, disclaimers, limitation of liability, and indemnification.

Governing law

These terms are governed by the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, without regard to conflict-of-laws principles. The exclusive venue for disputes is the state or federal courts located in Massachusetts, and you consent to their jurisdiction.

Changes

We may update these terms. Material changes will be posted here with a new effective date, and continued use after changes take effect constitutes acceptance.

Privacy Policy

This Privacy Policy explains how Vertical Growth LLC collects, uses, and protects information in connection with Corridorẽ.

Information we collect

  • Account information you provide, such as name, work email, firm, and billing details.
  • Usage information, such as queries you run, markets you save, and inputs like firm placements or uploaded case locations, stored to operate the product.
  • Technical information, such as log data and device or browser information, collected to secure and improve the service.

Categories of personal information

In California Consumer Privacy Act terms, the categories we collect are: identifiers (name, work email, account credentials), commercial information (subscription plan, billing records), internet or network activity (log data, pages and features used), professional or employment information (firm and role), and approximate location inferred from network information. We do not collect biometric, health, or precise geolocation information about users, and we do not collect neural data. We do not use personal information to profile individual consumers or to make automated decisions with legal or similarly significant effects.

How we use information

We use information to provide and secure the service, operate your account, process payment, respond to requests, and improve Corridorẽ. We do not sell personal information, we do not share personal information for cross-context behavioral advertising, and we do not use Corridorẽ data to build or sell lists of identifiable crash victims.

Service providers

We rely on infrastructure and processing providers to run Corridorẽ, which may include database and authentication hosting (for example Supabase), application hosting and edge delivery (for example Netlify or Cloudflare), and mapping services (for example Google Maps and Street View). These providers process data on our behalf under their own terms and security commitments.

Cookies and local storage

Corridorẽ uses browser local storage and similar technologies to keep you signed in and to remember your workspace, markets, and preferences. Some features will not work if these are disabled.

Data retention and security

We retain account information for the life of the account plus the period needed for legal, billing, and audit purposes, log data for a shorter operational window, and workspace inputs until you delete them or close the account. Criteria for retention are the length of our relationship, legal obligations, and dispute resolution needs. We apply administrative and technical safeguards designed to protect information. No method of transmission or storage is perfectly secure.

Legal bases and international transfers

Where the EU or UK GDPR applies, we process personal information to perform our contract with you, to pursue our legitimate interests in operating and securing a business service, to comply with legal obligations, and with consent where required. Corridorẽ is operated from the United States and information is processed there; where law requires safeguards for international transfers, we rely on recognized mechanisms such as standard contractual clauses with our providers.

Do Not Track and opt-out preference signals

Because we do not sell or share personal information, there is nothing to opt out of in that respect. Where an opt-out preference signal such as Global Privacy Control applies under state law, we treat it as a valid opt-out of sale and sharing for that browser. We do not respond to legacy Do Not Track headers beyond this.

Your choices and rights

Depending on your jurisdiction, you may have rights to access, correct, delete, or port your personal information, or to object to certain processing, including under the California Consumer Privacy Act as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act and, where applicable, the EU and UK GDPR. California residents should see the California Notices section below. To exercise any of these rights, contact us using the details in Contact Us; we will verify your request and respond within the time the applicable law requires.

Children

Corridorẽ is a business tool not directed to children and is not intended for anyone under eighteen.

Changes

We may update this policy and will post changes here with a new effective date.

Acceptable Use Policy

This policy defines permitted and prohibited uses of Corridorẽ. It supplements the Terms of Use.

Permitted use

Corridorẽ is licensed for lawful, aggregate market and ad-placement analysis, such as evaluating where crash activity concentrates, comparing advertising placements, and planning outdoor, broadcast, and digital media at the geographic level.

Prohibited use

  • Using Corridorẽ or any output to identify, profile, contact, or solicit individual crash victims or their families.
  • Attempting to re-identify individuals from aggregate or de-identified data.
  • Obtaining or using personal information from motor-vehicle or crash records for any purpose not permitted under the DPPA, or without the permissible use and credentials that law requires.
  • Any outreach that would violate the TCPA, CAN-SPAM, state do-not-call or telemarketing laws, or attorney-advertising and anti-solicitation rules.
  • Scraping, bulk downloading, reselling, sublicensing, or redistributing Corridorẽ data outside a written agreement.
  • Interfering with, probing, or attempting to bypass the security of the service.

Compliance certification

By using Corridorẽ you certify that your use falls within a lawful, permissible purpose and that you hold any licenses, credentials, and permitted-use authorizations that applicable law requires.

State Crash Data Rules and Laws

This section is a general reference to the laws that govern access to and use of crash reports and the personal information they contain. It is informational only, it is not legal advice, and it is not a complete statement of any jurisdiction's law. Statutes, agencies, fees, and procedures change. Confirm the current requirements with the relevant agency and with licensed counsel before acting.

The controlling federal framework

Across all fifty states and the District of Columbia, personal information contained in motor-vehicle and crash records is governed by the federal Driver's Privacy Protection Act (DPPA), 18 U.S.C. 2721 to 2725. The DPPA prohibits obtaining, disclosing, or using such personal information except for an enumerated permissible purpose. Relevant permissible uses commonly include use by a party to the crash, and use by an attorney, law firm, or licensed investigator in connection with actual or anticipated litigation or the service of process. The DPPA carries civil and criminal penalties under 18 U.S.C. 2723 for knowingly obtaining, disclosing, or using this information for a purpose that is not permitted.

Additional federal law applies to how crash data may be used and how outreach may be conducted:

  • 23 U.S.C. 409 makes certain crash data compiled for federal highway-safety programs privileged and inadmissible as evidence in litigation involving the listed locations. Corridorẽ uses such data for placement and market analysis, not as litigation evidence.
  • FCRA, 15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq. governs consumer-report information and permissible purpose.
  • TCPA, 47 U.S.C. 227 and CAN-SPAM govern calls, texts, and email outreach.
  • Professional-conduct rules, including ABA Model Rules 7.1 to 7.3 and 5.4 as adopted by each state, govern advertising, solicitation, and fee sharing by attorneys, and several jurisdictions impose waiting periods on post-incident solicitation.

California specifics

California crash reports (the CHP 555 collision report) are confidential under California Vehicle Code section 20012 and are disclosed by the California Highway Patrol or the investigating agency to persons with a proper interest, such as parties to the collision, their authorized representatives including attorneys, and insurers, in addition to the federal DPPA overlay. Statewide collision data is published in aggregate through SWITRS, the Statewide Integrated Traffic Records System, which is the kind of aggregate source Corridorẽ is built on. California also prohibits capping and running, the procurement of legal business through solicitation, under Business and Professions Code sections 6151 to 6154, and California Rules of Professional Conduct 7.1 to 7.3 govern attorney advertising and solicitation. Confirm current procedures with the CHP, the local agency, and counsel.

State-by-state reference

The table lists the agency that typically maintains crash records in each state. In every state, personal information in those records is subject to the federal DPPA in addition to state public-records law. Sources and procedures vary and must be verified.

StateTypical crash-record source (verify)Personal information
AlabamaAlabama Law Enforcement Agency (ALEA)DPPA applies
AlaskaAlaska DMV and DOT and Public FacilitiesDPPA applies
ArizonaArizona DOT and Department of Public SafetyDPPA applies
ArkansasArkansas State Police and DFADPPA applies
CaliforniaCalifornia Highway Patrol and DMVDPPA applies
ColoradoColorado State Patrol and DOTDPPA applies
ConnecticutConnecticut DOT, DMV, and State PoliceDPPA applies
DelawareDelaware DMV and State PoliceDPPA applies
District of ColumbiaDC DMV and Metropolitan PoliceDPPA applies
FloridaFlorida Dept. of Highway Safety and Motor VehiclesDPPA applies
GeorgiaGeorgia DOT and Dept. of Driver ServicesDPPA applies
HawaiiHawaii DOT and county police departmentsDPPA applies
IdahoIdaho Transportation Department and State PoliceDPPA applies
IllinoisIllinois DOT and State PoliceDPPA applies
IndianaIndiana State Police and BMVDPPA applies
IowaIowa DOTDPPA applies
KansasKansas DOT and Highway PatrolDPPA applies
KentuckyKentucky State Police and Transportation CabinetDPPA applies
LouisianaLouisiana State Police and DOTDDPPA applies
MaineMaine DMV and Bureau of Highway SafetyDPPA applies
MarylandMaryland MVA and State PoliceDPPA applies
MassachusettsMassachusetts RMV and MassDOT Crash Records (CRA-65)DPPA applies
MichiganMichigan State Police (UD-10)DPPA applies
MinnesotaMinnesota Dept. of Public Safety and DVSDPPA applies
MississippiMississippi Dept. of Public SafetyDPPA applies
MissouriMissouri State Highway PatrolDPPA applies
MontanaMontana DOT and Highway PatrolDPPA applies
NebraskaNebraska DOTDPPA applies
NevadaNevada Dept. of Public Safety and DMVDPPA applies
New HampshireNew Hampshire DMV and Dept. of SafetyDPPA applies
New JerseyNew Jersey MVC, DOT, and State PoliceDPPA applies
New MexicoNew Mexico DOT and Dept. of Public SafetyDPPA applies
New YorkNew York DMV (MV-104)DPPA applies
North CarolinaNorth Carolina DMV and DOTDPPA applies
North DakotaNorth Dakota DOTDPPA applies
OhioOhio Dept. of Public Safety and State Highway PatrolDPPA applies
OklahomaOklahoma Dept. of Public SafetyDPPA applies
OregonOregon DOT and DMVDPPA applies
PennsylvaniaPennsylvania State Police and PennDOTDPPA applies
Rhode IslandRhode Island DMV and State PoliceDPPA applies
South CarolinaSouth Carolina DMV and Dept. of Public SafetyDPPA applies
South DakotaSouth Dakota Dept. of Public Safety and DOTDPPA applies
TennesseeTennessee Dept. of Safety and Homeland SecurityDPPA applies
TexasTexas DOT Crash Records (CRIS)DPPA applies
UtahUtah Dept. of Public Safety and DOTDPPA applies
VermontVermont DMVDPPA applies
VirginiaVirginia DMV and State PoliceDPPA applies
WashingtonWashington State Patrol and DOTDPPA applies
West VirginiaWest Virginia DMV and DOTDPPA applies
WisconsinWisconsin DOTDPPA applies
WyomingWyoming DOT and Highway PatrolDPPA applies

Agencies and procedures above are provided as a starting reference and must be verified against current state sources. The uniform point that holds across states is the federal DPPA overlay on personal information in these records. Corridorẽ uses crash data at the aggregate level for placement analysis and does not distribute individual victim contact information.

California Notices

This section supplements the Privacy Policy for California residents under the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act (Civil Code sections 1798.100 to 1798.199.100, the CCPA) and its regulations, including the updated regulations effective January 1, 2026. Some CCPA obligations apply only to businesses meeting statutory thresholds; we honor the rights below for California residents regardless.

Notice at collection

The categories of personal information we collect, the purposes, the retention criteria, and the service providers involved are described in the Privacy Policy above. We collect personal information directly from you and from your device when you use the service. We do not sell personal information and we do not share personal information for cross-context behavioral advertising, and we have not done either in the preceding twelve months. We do not collect or process sensitive personal information for the purpose of inferring characteristics, and we do not knowingly collect personal information of consumers under sixteen.

Your California rights

  • Right to know and access. You may request the categories and specific pieces of personal information we have collected about you, the sources, the purposes, and the categories of recipients.
  • Right to delete. You may request deletion of personal information we collected from you, subject to statutory exceptions.
  • Right to correct. You may request correction of inaccurate personal information.
  • Right to opt out of sale or sharing. We do not sell or share personal information. If that ever changes, we will provide the required links and honor opt-outs, and we treat a Global Privacy Control signal as a valid opt-out where the law requires.
  • Right to limit use of sensitive personal information. We do not use or disclose sensitive personal information for purposes that trigger this right.
  • Right to non-discrimination. We will not discriminate against you for exercising any CCPA right.

How to exercise these rights

Submit a request to privacy@corridore.com from the email associated with your account, or through the Contact Us details below. We verify requests by matching information you provide against what we hold, and we may request additional verification for sensitive requests. You may use an authorized agent with written permission; we may still ask you to verify your identity directly. We will confirm receipt within ten business days and respond within forty five calendar days, with one forty five day extension where reasonably necessary and with notice.

Automated decisionmaking

Corridorẽ scores geography and advertising placements, not people. We do not use automated decisionmaking technology to make significant decisions concerning consumers as defined by the CCPA regulations, such as decisions about financial or lending services, housing, education, employment, or healthcare.

Shine the Light

California Civil Code section 1798.83 permits California residents to request certain information about disclosure of personal information to third parties for their direct marketing purposes. We do not disclose personal information to third parties for their direct marketing purposes.

Contact Us

For questions about these terms, privacy, acceptable use, or a compliance or data request, reach the Corridorẽ team.

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