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How to Remove Your Content from Fapello

Fapello is an aggregator that republishes creators' paywalled photos and videos on auto-generated public profile pages, usually scraped from OnlyFans and similar platforms. Its own removal handling is unreliable, so the escalation paths, the hosting provider, the domain registrar, and the search engines, are where results actually come from. This guide walks through all of them in order.

Before you start

  • A complete list of infringing URLs, your profile page on the site plus every individual photo and video page.
  • Proof of ownership, links to your official accounts or original files with timestamps.
  • A dedicated email address that is not your personal one, since notice contents can be forwarded.
  • A decision on who files. Notices carry a name; filing through an authorized agent keeps your legal name off them.

Step 1: Document every infringing URL

Leak pages vanish, move, and reappear, so build your evidence file first. Copy the exact URL of your profile page and of each media page, take dated screenshots, and note the domain, Fapello has operated across several domains and mirrors, and each notice must reference the one actually serving your content.

Step 2: Try the site's own removal route

Check the footer of the exact domain hosting your content for a DMCA, report, or contact link, most versions of the site publish one, though the domains rotate too often for any single link to stay reliable. Send a standard DMCA notice identifying your original work and listing every infringing URL. Give it up to a week, but do not wait on it: proceed to the next steps in parallel.

Step 3: Find the real host and CDN, and send your notice there

This is where takedowns start working. Run the domain through a WHOIS lookup and urlscan.io to identify the hosting provider and any CDN in front of it. If Cloudflare is in the chain, file through Cloudflare's abuse portal, it forwards the complaint and can disclose the origin host. Then send your DMCA notice to the actual host's abuse contact. Hosts respond far more often than leak sites do, because ignoring valid notices puts their own safe-harbor protection at risk.

Step 4: Put the domain registrar on notice

The WHOIS record also names the registrar. Send the registrar's abuse contact a copy of your notice, noting that the site is non-responsive. Registrars rarely act on a single complaint, but a documented pattern of ignored notices supports suspension decisions later.

Step 5: De-index every URL from Google and Bing

Even if a page stays up, de-indexing makes it effectively invisible. Submit every URL through Google's copyright removal form at reportcontent.google.com, and file the equivalent report with Bing through Microsoft's copyright infringement form. If the material is intimate imagery posted without consent, Google also offers a separate non-consensual imagery removal path that does not depend on copyright.

Step 6: Monitor for re-uploads

Fapello-style aggregators re-scrape source platforms, so removed pages can regenerate. Search your name and aliases weekly, use reverse-image search on your most-leaked photos, and re-file immediately using your saved notice as a template.

What happens after you file

Expect silence or slow, partial action from the site itself, and faster results from the host and the search engines, de-indexing alone usually cuts the page's traffic to almost nothing. Keep every confirmation email; a paper trail of ignored notices strengthens registrar and host escalations.

Doing this cycle alone means putting a name on every notice and repeating the process every time content resurfaces. Rulta specializes in exactly this: its team files takedowns for creators under its own agents' names, keeping your identity off the paperwork, and monitors for re-uploads continuously.

This guide is educational information, not legal advice.

Need the notice text?Generate a complete DMCA notice for Fapello — free, one minute

Frequently asked questions

Does Fapello actually respond to DMCA notices?

Inconsistently. Some creators report removals within a few days, while other notices sit ignored for weeks. That is why the hosting-provider, registrar, and search-engine steps in this guide matter more than the site's own process.

Do I have to put my real name on a DMCA notice?

A notice must carry the name of the rights holder or an authorized agent. If you file through an agent or a takedown service, the agent's name appears on the notice instead of yours.

How long does removal usually take?

Hosting providers and CDNs typically act within days because they have legal safe-harbor obligations to protect. Google de-indexing requests are often processed in under a week.

Can I get a whole profile page removed instead of individual posts?

Yes. List the profile URL and every individual media URL in your notice. Hosts and search engines act on exactly the URLs you provide, so include every page you want gone.

What if my content comes back after removal?

Aggregators re-scrape constantly, so plan on monitoring. Keep a copy of your original notice so you can re-file quickly with the new URLs.