Every platform has a takedown form. We show you where it is.
When your photos, videos, courses, or writing get stolen and re-uploaded somewhere else, the law is on your side: the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) requires platforms to remove infringing content once they receive a valid notice. The hard part isn’t the law; it’s the paperwork. Every platform hides its copyright form in a different place, asks for different fields, and rejects notices over small mistakes.
DMCA.ai exists to fix that. Each guide covers one platform and walks you through the real takedown form, step by step, with screenshots of every screen: what link to click, what to type in each field, and what happens after you press submit. No legal jargon, no guesswork.
Who’s behind this
DMCA.ai is built and maintained by the team at Rulta, a DMCA takedown and brand-protection service that files thousands of takedown notices for content creators every month. The guides here are the same playbooks Rulta’s agents use daily, published for free, for anyone who wants to file on their own.
If you’d rather not spend your time on forms and follow-ups, Rulta’s team can handle the entire process for you with monitoring, filing, and escalation included.
A note on legal advice
DMCA.ai is an educational resource, not a law firm. Nothing here is legal advice. If your situation is complicated (disputed ownership, fair-use questions, repeat infringers), talk to a copyright attorney. Questions or corrections: [email protected].