Act A - The Market Structure
The justice system is theoretically equal, but practically requires massive capital to fight corporate negligence. A single individual cannot sue a multi-billion dollar mining company over poisoned groundwater. The mechanism to fight back is the Class Action, but the legal requirement to build the class—finding the plaintiffs, proving the uniform harm, and establishing communication—is a logistical wall that protects bad actors. Systemic harm requires systemic aggregation to fight.
Act B - The Story
Chief Paul's community has seen a 400% spike in rare cancers. They suspect leaks from an abandoned mine upriver. Three other towns downriver have similar spikes. None of them have the millions required to hire hydrologists and lawyers to fight the mining conglomerate.
Samantha is a predator in the best sense: a Toronto litigator who destroys negligent corporations via mass torts. But she only invests her firm's millions if she is certain she has a unified, legally certifiable class of plaintiffs.
Chief Paul uploads anonymized health statistics and geographic data to the clearinghouse. The neighboring towns do the same. The platform’s algorithm recognizes the cluster and pings Samantha. Seeing a completely pre-aggregated, data-backed class, Samantha flies her team North. The platform seamlessly handles the secure transition of medical data. The Class is certified in court, and the mining conglomerate is forced into a $200 million remediation settlement.
Act C - Why This Market Stays Broken Without Infrastructure
Without a centralized aggregation and verification mechanism, diffuse harm remains unpunished. DeeperPoint serves as an algorithmic union for victims of negligence, transforming isolated tragedies into coordinated, unstoppable legal leverage.
Characters are fictional. Environmental mass torts and the difficulty of class certification are real. DeeperPoint is building the infrastructure this story describes.