Copyright and IP takedowns for stolen content
A copyright takedown is a formal request to remove content that infringes your intellectual property. It works when you own the rights and identify the infringement precisely — the original work, the infringing URL, and a good-faith statement. You send us the details and we take it from here, preparing and filing valid notices through each platform's official process.
Your content stolen or cloned?
Send us the original and the infringing copy — we'll file the takedown through the platform's official process.
We never ask for passwords · Legitimate owners & genuine victims only · No guaranteed outcomes

What you can have removed
If you own the rights, platforms will remove infringing material through their copyright and trademark processes. Common cases include your photos or videos reposted without permission, written work or designs copied wholesale, online stores cloning your product listings and images, and trademark misuse where someone uses your brand name or logo to mislead. The decisive factors are clear ownership and precise identification of what infringes and where.
Copyright protects your original creative work; trademark protects your brand identifiers. Many situations involve both, and we file on whichever grounds — or combination — gives the strongest, fastest result.
How we file a takedown correctly
We prepare a valid notice with everything the process requires: identification of your original work, the exact URLs of the infringing content, your ownership evidence, and the good-faith and accuracy statements that make a notice legally sound. We file through the platform's official copyright or trademark channel and escalate properly if it stalls.
We only file truthful notices for rights you actually hold. We never use copyright claims to silence criticism, fair use, or competitors — fraudulent takedown notices are illegal and can expose the filer to liability.

Counter-notices and repeat infringers
Sometimes a recipient files a counter-notice. We'll explain what that means for your case and the realistic options, including the formal steps required to maintain a removal. For persistent infringers — stores that re-list your products under new accounts, for instance — we can pair takedowns with monitoring so repeat infringement is caught and acted on quickly.
Where we draw the line
This is a category crowded with scams and harassment-for-hire. Our boundaries are the point — they're what make a removal stick and what makes us safe to work with.
What we will do
- File valid copyright and trademark notices
- Remove cloned listings and misused branding
- Pair takedowns with monitoring for repeat infringers
What we won't do
- File notices for content you don't own
- Use copyright to suppress criticism or fair use
- Submit fraudulent or exaggerated claims
Frequently asked questions
What do you need to file a copyright takedown?
We need proof you own the work, identification of the original (the post, file, or registration), and the exact URLs of the infringing content. The notice also requires good-faith and accuracy statements, which we prepare with you. The clearer your ownership and the more precise the URLs, the faster a platform can act.
Can you remove a store that cloned my products and photos?
Yes. Cloned stores typically infringe both copyright (your photos and descriptions) and, where your brand is used, trademark. We file on the strongest grounds through the marketplace or platform's IP channel, and target the specific infringing listings and images. If the seller re-lists under new accounts, monitoring plus repeat takedowns is the practical answer.
What happens if they file a counter-notice?
A counter-notice puts the dispute back to you and the platform's formal process. We'll explain what it means in plain terms and the realistic next steps, including the legal actions sometimes needed to keep content down. We only ever pursue claims for rights you genuinely hold, which keeps your position strong if a dispute escalates.