Public opt-in record

How Cupiro collects SMS consent

Cupiro sends a one-time verification code by SMS when you sign in or sign up. Below is an exact rendering of the screen where a user provides their mobile number and agrees to receive that message. The real screen lives inside our app behind a login; this page reproduces it 1:1 so anyone — including Sakamoto Labs LLC, carrier reviewers, and Twilio — can audit the consent flow without an account.

Step 1 — Phone-entry screen

Enter Your Phone Number

We'll send you a 6-digit verification code.

US/CA +1
Phone number
Send Code

By tapping Send Code, you consent to receive a one-time SMS verification code from Cupiro. Message and data rates may apply. Reply STOP to opt out, or HELP for help. See our Messaging Policy and Privacy Policy.

Step 2 — What happens after the user taps Send Code

The tap is the documented opt-in action. The disclosure paragraph above the button states this in plain language, and the button is disabled until the user has typed a valid phone number — so consent is given knowingly, not by accident.

Cupiro then sends one SMS containing a six-digit verification code, e.g.:

Cupiro: Your verification code is 482913. Don't share it. Reply STOP to opt out, HELP for help.

The user types the code back into the app and the phone is verified. Until they tap Send Code, no SMS is sent. Until they verify, the number isn't stored as verified.

Step 3 — How users opt out

  • Reply STOP to any Cupiro message. The user receives one confirmation: Cupiro: You've been opted out and will no longer receive messages from us. Reply START to opt back in.”
  • Reply HELP to any message for support contact details.
  • Email support [at] cupiro [dot] com if the user changed numbers and can't reply STOP.
  • Reply START or UNSTOP to opt back in.

For reviewers

The full SMS / messaging program, complete sample messages, opt-out keywords, and data-handling terms are documented in three companion pages, all reachable without authentication: