KEY POINTS
  • On Monday, trading start-up Robinhood offered credit to some credit and apologized for its recent outages. But in exchange for a voucher, Robinhood asked that users sign a document agreeing not to take legal action, according to emails seen by CNBC. 
  • Those impacted by the outage are faced with the choice: Take the amount Robinhood offers now and forego other compensation down the road. Or take legal action.
  • "It's misleading for Robinhood to call this a goodwill credit, says Michael Taaffe, partner at Shumaker, Loop & Kendrick. "If it were good will credit, it wouldn't come with strings attached. What they offered was a settlement."

Robinhood's recent show of goodwill came with strings attached, according to some users. 

On Monday, the trading start-up offered a credit to a group of clients and apologized for its recent multiple-day outage. In exchange for the voucher, the company asked that users sign a document agreeing not to take legal action, according to Robinhood emails seen by CNBC.