GoFundMe Inc. announced a major corporate restructuring on Wednesday with the launch of “OhFuckMe,” a standalone subsidiary dedicated to an emerging secondary market of donation recovery. The new venture aims to provide a platform for donors who wish to recoup funds contributed to high-net-worth individuals or campaigns they subsequently regret supporting.

The launch follows a week of intense public scrutiny regarding the James Van Der Beek family fundraiser. After it was revealed that the late actor’s family retains significant assets, including a 36-acre Texas ranch, GoFundMe executives identified a market opportunity to monetize donor remorse through a dedicated sister site.

“OhFuckMe operates independently from the main platform but shares its core DNA,” said GoFundMe CEO Tim Cadogan in a press briefing. “While GoFundMe is about the spirit of giving, OhFuckMe is about the spirit of ‘giving up’ and asking for it back. It is a necessary counterbalance in the philanthropic ecosystem.”

The new venture allows verified users to launch campaigns specifically to recover money they claim to have donated to controversial causes. However, the platform’s “honor system” verification process has already led to a flood of unverifiable claims. Early adopters are using the site to demand restitution for millions of dollars they purportedly donated anonymously to famous scams.

In one prominent case on the new site, a user listed as ‘Silent_Backer_001’ has launched a campaign titled Reclaiming My $1.5 Million Van Der Beek Contribution. The user alleges they anonymously covered the bulk of the memorial fund but now ask the public to reimburse them “due to the family’s confirmed real estate holdings.”

“I did not know about the ranch when I wired the funds,” the anonymous user wrote. “I am asking the OhFuckMe community to help me recover my $1.5 million so I can redirect it to those truly in need.”

Similar activity has been observed regarding the infamous “We Build The Wall” campaign. A OhFuckMe user claiming to be a “founding anonymous donor” is seeking $15 million in community reparations. “I gave Brian Kolfage eight figures in good faith,” the campaign states. “I was misled. Now, I am asking the internet to do the right thing and help me recover the money that I definitely had and definitely sent.”

Financial analysts warn that OhFuckMe may be creating a “liability vacuum,” noting that the total amount of money currently being requested by “regretful anonymous donors” exceeds the total amount of money actually donated to the original campaigns by a factor of ten.

Despite these discrepancies, OhFuckMe’s leadership remains confident in the venture’s growth potential.

“We provide the infrastructure for the ask,” said OhFuckMe’s newly appointed Head of Operations, Sarah Miller. “If a user claims they anonymously funded the entire Fyre Festival and wants the public to reimburse them, that is a conversation between them and the market.”