Create copy-and-paste DMCA takedown notices to protect your photos, videos, and clips when they are reposted or leaked without permission.
When your paid or private content is leaked, scraped, or reposted on other sites, it is not just about pride. It is about lost income, safety, and long-term brand control. DMCA takedown notices are one of the main tools creators have to fight against unauthorized distribution.
Most large platforms, web hosts, search engines, and payment partners have formal DMCA or copyright policies. They will not act on a vague email like "please delete my content", but they are required to respond when they receive a clear notice with the right elements under their policy.
This generator helps you put those required elements in order: who you are, what you own, where the infringing content lives, and what you want the provider to do. It is written in plain language so you can act quickly when you spot a leak.
DMCA enforcement will not stop every re-upload, but consistent notices can remove a lot of stolen content, reduce search visibility for pirated copies, and send a strong signal that you defend your rights.
Accurate contact details: Providers need a way to reach you. Include a working email address and, if you are comfortable, a mailing address and phone number. You can still sign as a stage name or brand while keeping your legal name private in public posts.
Clear identification of your work: Explain what you created in enough detail that someone who does not know you can understand. If possible, link to your official paid post, profile, or website where the original appears or is sold.
Exact URLs to the infringing material: Platforms cannot search the whole internet on your behalf. Copy and paste the full URLs where stolen videos, galleries, screenshots, or archives appear. If there are many, group them by site.
Required legal statements: Standard DMCA language includes a good faith belief statement, confirmation that you are the owner or an authorized agent, and a perjury statement. This tool lets you toggle those sections on and off, but most providers expect them to be present.
For leaked OnlyFans or cam content, most creators start with the hosting provider or the abuse / DMCA contact listed in the site's footer or legal page. Many tube sites, file hosts, and forums have specific forms dedicated to copyright reports.
If search engines like Google are indexing stolen copies, you can also submit notices directly to their removal tools so that pirated links are harder to find. When an impersonation account is involved, include your official profile link in the notice to help moderators verify your identity.
Over time, it is useful to keep a simple tracking sheet of which sites respond quickly, which need follow-up, and which ignore notices completely. This makes it easier to prioritize where you spend your energy when new leaks appear.
A frequent issue is sending emotional messages without the key legal details. It is understandable to be angry or upset when your content is stolen, but support teams still need clear URLs, ownership information, and specific actions you are requesting.
Another mistake is omitting the original work description. If you only say "this video is mine" without explaining where it originally lived or how you control it, platforms have less to work with when validating your claim.
Some creators also forget to check the provider's exact process. A strong DMCA email may still be ignored if the platform only accepts reports through a dedicated web form. Always look for "DMCA", "copyright", or "report abuse" pages before you send.
This tool gives you a practical operational template based on common DMCA expectations. It does not replace a lawyer, does not create an attorney–client relationship, and is not tailored to any specific country, state, or platform.
If you are dealing with major piracy networks, agency contracts, studio ownership, or repeated non-compliance from platforms, speak with a qualified copyright or media lawyer. A short consultation can help you adjust your notices, preserve evidence, and plan next steps.
For most solo creators, having clear templates, sending consistent notices, and documenting responses already puts you ahead of many people who never report leaks at all. Use this generator as a starting point and adapt the language until it fits your workflow and risk level.
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