DMCA.ai: DMCA takedown guides for every platform
Look up a site. Get the exact takedown steps.
77,000+ sites on file
Index of guides
Where was your content stolen?
Every guide is a case file: the exact form, what to write in each field, real screenshots, and what to do when the platform stalls.
Found it in Google results? Start with the Google guide
Stolen to a specific leak site? Find its removal guide
Need the notice text itself? Generate it free in one minute
A leak spreading across many sites? Rulta hunts them all down
Procedure
How a takedown works
You file
About 15 minutes
Open your platform’s guide, follow the real screenshots, and submit the form. Free, no lawyer, no account needed on most platforms.
The platform reviews
Typically 2–5 days
Platforms must act on valid notices to keep their legal safe harbor. Google often responds within 1–3 days; social apps within a week.
It comes down
Or you escalate
The uploader can counter-notice. If a site ignores you, go after its host and de-index the page from Google. The guides cover both.
Before you file
Common questions
Is filing a DMCA takedown free?
Yes. Every platform’s takedown form is free to use. You only pay if you choose to hire a takedown service or a lawyer to handle it for you.
Do I need a lawyer?
No. The forms are built for rights owners to file themselves. A careful notice takes about fifteen minutes. Our guides show exactly what to write in each field.
How long until the content comes down?
Google usually acts within 1–3 days, social platforms within 2–5 days. Email-based processes like Telegram can take days to weeks.
Does the DMCA work outside the US?
It helps worldwide. The DMCA is US law, but the major platforms accept copyright notices from creators anywhere, and the EU’s Digital Services Act provides similar reporting routes.
The retainer option
No time for the paperwork?
Rulta files to the site, its host, Cloudflare, Google and Bing, follows up, and keeps re-filing as mirrors resurface. Your name never appears on a notice.