US The Contractor's CYA
Contractors who want to stop getting sued
- Target:
- Roofers, landscapers, small construction crews
- Pain:
- Liability claims from customers who want free repairs a month later
- Weapon:
- Auto-generated completion evidence chain with timestamps, GPS, and AI narration
The pain
You’re a roofer in Ohio. You finish a roof on Tuesday. A month later it rains, the customer’s ceiling leaks, and you’re looking at a $50,000 lawsuit alleging “faulty workmanship.”
Maybe it was. Maybe a branch came down. Maybe their cousin climbed up to install a satellite dish and stepped through your flashing. You have no idea, and no way to prove anything. In an American courtroom, no evidence means you lose.
Roofers’ liability insurance reflects exactly that risk — it’s brutal.
The AI weapon
Before the crew leaves each day, the foreman walks the site with their phone and scans the key stages: underlayment, flashing, shingles laid, nails sealed. The AI identifies the stage in each frame, bakes in GPS + timestamp, and narrates the critical bits: “Underlayment: no bubbles. Flashing: sealed.” Then it generates a Daily Completion Report with the video + the narration + a homeowner signature link, and emails it to the owner.
A month later, when the suit arrives, you open your phone, hit a button, and the video timestamped to that afternoon plays in court. The flashing was perfect when you left.
The aha moment
This isn’t a logging tool. It’s a legal shield. The same roofer, using the same system, pays 30% less in liability insurance the following year — because the insurer sees it too.