They handed me a $50 “courtesy” voucher at the baggage desk and smiled like they’d done me a favor.
I kept the voucher. Then I opened my laptop and used a 1999 international treaty they never mention at check-in.
Total recovered: $1,650.
Here are the three legal weapons most passengers never know they have.
The Psychology
Why $50?
Because it is calibrated to feel generous enough that you sign the back,where the fine print says “acceptance of goodwill, full and final settlement.”
That voucher is not a refund. It is a liability contract disguised as kindness.
Never sign it. Never spend it. Treat it like a parking ticket from someone who hit your car.
Weapon 1: The Montreal Convention
There is a treaty called the Montreal Convention. Airlines cannot opt out. It is baked into your ticket whether they mention it or not.
For checked baggage delays on international flights, they are strictly liable up to 1,131 Special Drawing Rights,about $1,500 USD.
The key word is *delay*, not loss.
A 72-hour delay means you can claim emergency purchases: clothes, toiletries, phone chargers, even a suit for your meeting. “Reasonable necessity” is the legal standard, not “what the airline feels like.”
Weapon 2: The EU261 "Geography Hack"
This is the one that shocks Americans.
If your flight *departed* from any EU or UK airport,on *any* airline, including Delta, United, or American,EU261 (or UK261) applies.
Bag delayed causing you to miss a connection? Flight delayed 3+ hours on arrival?
That is up to €600 in *cash*, not vouchers. Separate from your baggage claim. Separate from the Montreal Convention.
Two claims. One flight. The airline will process the first and hope you never file the second.
Weapon 3: The 2024 DOT Shift
For US domestic flights, the DOT changed the rules in 2024.
If the airline loses your bag, they must refund your checked bag fee *automatically*,no forms required.
For delays, they owe “reasonable interim expenses.” And if your flight was cancelled? New DOT rules mandate cash refunds if you decline rebooking. Not credits. Not “free flights.” Cash.
Airlines are still training staff on these rules. Most passengers are not.
The Receipt Game
Airlines will reject specific categories to make you give up.
They will say: “We do not cover cosmetics.” (They do if you had none.)
They will say: “We do not cover alcohol.” (They do if you bought it to replace a gift.)
They will say: “We do not cover clothing.” (That is literally the entire point of the regulation.)
Buy what you need. Keep every receipt. Take a photo of the receipt at the store in case thermal paper fades.
I claimed $340 in interim expenses. The airline approved $340. Because the law does not ask their permission.
The Email That Ends The Runaround
After the initial rejection, send this exact paragraph. Email only,never phone.
*“I am filing a formal claim under Article 17 and Article 19 of the Montreal Convention for baggage delay and associated interim expenses. Additionally, I am claiming compensation under [EU261/UK261 Regulation (EC) No 261/2004 / US DOT 14 CFR Part 254 and refund rules]. Please confirm your registered postal address for legal correspondence and provide a formal claim reference number.”*
Customer service scripts are not trained for treaty citations. The case escalates automatically.
The Math
Here is how the $1,650 broke down:
- EU261 cash compensation (flight delayed 4+ hours, departed London): ~$650
- Montreal Convention interim expenses: $340
- DOT automatic checked bag fee refund: $70
- Remaining baggage liability settlement (negotiated after citing the SDR limit): $590
One email chain. No lawyer. No small claims court.
The airline paid in 11 days once the legal department saw the thread.
The 5-Minute Airport Protocol
Do this before you leave the baggage hall:
✓ File a Property Irregularity Report (PIR) at the baggage desk. Demand the reference number. No PIR = weak paper trail.
✓ Photograph the baggage carousel showing your flight number and the empty belt.
✓ Photograph your luggage tags while you still have them in hand.
✓ If they offer you the $50 voucher at the desk, say: “I will pursue a formal claim first.” Then take the voucher but do not sign the back.
✓ Buy only what you need, but buy it immediately. Delayed purchases look less “necessary” to adjusters.
The Fatal Mistakes
These are the traps that turn a $1,650 claim into a $50 “courtesy”:
- Signing the back of the voucher (legal settlement)
- Not filing the PIR before leaving the airport
- Throwing away receipts because “it’s just $20”
- Letting the airline merge your baggage claim with your EU261 claim into one “goodwill” number
- Saying “I’ll call tomorrow” instead of emailing today (phone calls create no record)
Save this thread before your next trip. The airlines already know these rules.
They are just hoping you do not.
SOURCES
-Montreal Convention (ICAO) , Article 17 and 19 liability limits for baggage delay and loss: icao.int/sustainability…
The reason your AI content gets flagged isn't what you think.
It's not the topic. It's not the length.
It's this pattern nobody teaches you to remove:
The overuse of transition words.
"However" "Therefore" "Furthermore" "In addition"
AI uses these like breathing. Every sentence. Every time.
Here's how to fix it:
Prompt 1 — The Transition Killer
"Rewrite the following text by removing all formulaic transition words. Replace 'however' with natural sentence breaks. Replace 'therefore' with direct cause statements. Replace 'furthermore' with actual new information. Keep the meaning intact but make it feel unscripted.
Text: [paste]"
This alone removes 40% of detection flags.
Prompt 2 — The Rhythm Breaker
"Read your text aloud. Any sentence that sounds like it was written by a robot — it was.
Rewrite the following text with varied sentence lengths. Short. Then long. Then short again. Remove any sentence that sounds like it follows a template.
🚨 BREAKING: I asked Claude to upgrade my LinkedIn profile…
It didn't just "improve" it, it turned it into a recruiter magnet.
Here are the exact 10 prompts I used:
Prompt 1 — The Headline Overhaul
"My current LinkedIn headline is: [PASTE CURRENT HEADLINE]
I work as [YOUR ROLE] in [YOUR INDUSTRY].
Rewrite my headline to:
- Include what I do AND who I help
- Use keywords recruiters actually search
- Show the transformation I provide
- Be compelling in under 220 characters
Give me 10 variations — some bold, some professional, some keyword-heavy."
Your headline is your first impression. Make it count.
Prompt 2 — The About Section
"I'm a [YOUR ROLE] with [X YEARS] experience in [YOUR INDUSTRY].
Current situation: [WHAT'S WRONG WITH CURRENT ABOUT]
Create a LinkedIn About section that:
- Opens with a hook (not "I am a...")
- Shows what problems I solve
- Proves it with results or achievements
- Ends with a clear call to action
Tone: Confident but not arrogant. Specific but not boring.
🚨BREAKING: Claude can now write your entire job application like a top recruiter.
Here are 10 prompts that turn a job description into a tailored CV, cover letter, and interview prep guide in under 5 minutes.
(Save this)
1. Decode the job description
Prompt:
“Act as a recruiter. Analyze this job description and identify: key skills, core responsibilities, hiring objectives, must-use keywords, and what makes a standout candidate. Present it in a table.
Then, use those insights to fill and tailor the downloaded resume template. Make it ATS-friendly, keyword-optimized, and aligned with the role.
JD: [paste]”
2. Tailor your CV
Prompt:
“Rewrite my CV for this role without adding false information. Improve the summary, experience bullets, and skills section. Use ATS-friendly keywords from the JD and make each bullet relevant and results-driven.
CV: [paste]
JD: [paste]”
I Cancelled Spotify.
I cancelled Disney+.
I cancelled Apple TV+.
No more paying every month.
Claude transformed my laptop into a free entertainment center.
Here are 8 prompts to create this system:
1️⃣ Build Your Free Entertainment Dashboard
Act as my entertainment system designer.
Create a laptop dashboard using only free + legal sources.
Organize into:
• Movies
• TV Shows
• Music
• Podcasts
• Books
• Games
• Documentaries
• Learning
Return:
• 5 platforms per category
• What each is best for
• How to use it like a premium system
2️⃣ Replace Spotify (Personal Music Station)
Act as my music curator.
I like: [artists/genres]
Create a weekly plan using free platforms:
• YouTube
• SoundCloud
• Bandcamp
BREAKING: Claude can now build you a full website in hours — not weeks.
Here are 10 powerful prompts that can help you create a website that looks worth $5,000+
(Save this before everyone starts using it)
Prompt 1 — The Homepage Architect
"You're building a homepage for [TYPE OF BUSINESS/WEBSITE].
Create the full structure:
- Hero section headline + subheadline
- 3 core value propositions
- Social proof section
- CTA button copy
- Navigation structure
Make it modern, clean, and conversion-focused.
Describe what each section should look like and what copy goes in it."
This is where every great website starts.
Prompt 2 — The About Page Story
"Write an About page for [BUSINESS/BRAND].
Structure:
- How it started (the origin story)
- Why it exists (the mission)
- What makes it different (the unique angle)
- Who it's for (the ideal customer)
Tone: Relatable, not corporate. Real, not perfect.
Make visitors feel like they already know the brand."