How to Remove Your Content from Coomer
Coomer is a scraper archive that automatically mirrors paywalled content from OnlyFans, Fansly, and similar platforms onto public creator pages. Creators who contact the site directly are routinely ignored or refused, so the effective strategy targets the infrastructure around it, the companies hosting it, the registrar behind its domain, and the search engines sending it traffic.
Before you start
- Your creator page URL on the site plus the URLs of individual posts you want documented.
- Proof you are the rights holder, your official platform profile and examples of the original posts.
- A filing email address separate from your personal accounts.
- A choice about anonymity. DMCA notices name their sender; an authorized agent can file so your legal name never appears.
Step 1: Document everything before it moves
The site has changed domains multiple times after losing hosting, and your page URL changes with it. Record the current domain, your full creator-page URL, individual post URLs, and dated screenshots. This file lets you re-file within minutes whenever the site resurfaces at a new address.
Step 2: Send the site's posted takedown route a notice, without expecting results
The platform has published a DMCA contact at various times, and a small number of creators report responses; most report none, or template replies with no removal. Send one properly formatted notice for the record if a contact is posted on the current domain. Do not wait for an answer before moving to Step 3, the value here is the documented refusal, which strengthens every escalation that follows.
Step 3: Identify the current host and CDN, and file with them
Run the current domain through WHOIS and urlscan.io to map its infrastructure, the CDN in front and the hosting provider behind it. File your DMCA notice with each. This route has real teeth: hosting providers have repeatedly terminated the platform's service after receiving complaints, because keeping a non-compliant customer jeopardizes their own safe-harbor protection. Every major outage the site has suffered traces back to notices like yours.
Step 4: Notify the domain registrar
Send the registrar listed in WHOIS a copy of your notice and the evidence that the site ignores takedowns. Be aware that some TLDs the site has used sit outside standard ICANN dispute policies, so this route is weaker here than for ordinary domains, file it, then put your energy into Steps 3 and 5.
Step 5: De-index every URL from Google and Bing
Submit your creator page and every post URL to Google at reportcontent.google.com and to Bing through Microsoft's copyright infringement form. Search engines process valid notices within days, and once your pages are de-indexed, someone searching your name simply stops finding them. This step alone removes most of the real-world harm.
Step 6: Monitor for re-scrapes and domain moves
Because the archive re-imports content automatically, check monthly for your page under the current domain, and search your name and aliases for new mirrors. Re-file from your evidence file each time; repeat filings are normal for this site.
What happens after you file
Expect nothing from the site, action from hosts and search engines within days to weeks, and a cycle that repeats when the platform relocates. Keep every receipt, the accumulated record is what convinces each new host to drop them faster.
Fighting an automated scraper manually is exhausting, and every notice you send yourself carries your name. Rulta specializes in leaked-content removal for subscription creators, its agents file the host, registrar, and de-indexing notices under their own names and keep monitoring so re-scrapes get caught early.
This guide is educational information, not legal advice.
Need the notice text?Generate a complete DMCA notice for Coomer — free, one minute
Frequently asked questions
Does Coomer honor DMCA takedown requests?
Creators overwhelmingly report being ignored or refused. The site is built to archive scraped subscription content, so this guide focuses on its hosting providers, registrar, and search engines, which do respond.
Why does the site's domain keep changing?
Hosting providers and registrars have repeatedly dropped the platform after receiving DMCA complaints, forcing it to move. Those disruptions came from rights holders filing exactly the notices described in this guide.
Can I escalate through the domain registrar?
It depends on the domain. Some of the TLDs the site has used fall outside standard ICANN policies, which weakens the registrar route. The hosting provider and search-engine steps do not depend on the domain at all.
Will filing expose my real name?
Notices carry a sender's name and can be forwarded or published. Filing through an authorized agent keeps your legal identity off every notice.
My page was removed but came back. Why?
Coomer works from automated scrapes of subscription platforms, so content can be re-imported. Ongoing monitoring and quick re-filing are part of the process, not a sign the first takedown failed.