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How to Remove Your Content from InfluencersGoneWild

InfluencersGoneWild is an aggregator blog that republishes leaked and stolen photos and videos of influencers and subscription creators, and its name has spawned copycat domains that do the same. The site nominally accepts removal requests, but enforcement is inconsistent, so this guide pairs that route with the escalations that reliably deliver: the host, the registrar, and the search engines.

Before you start

  • The exact domain serving your content, plus every post and gallery URL featuring you.
  • Proof of ownership, original files or links to where the content first appeared.
  • A dedicated email address for filings.
  • A decision on anonymity, notices carry a name, and filing through an authorized agent keeps yours off them.

Step 1: Document every infringing URL

Copy the URL of each post, gallery, and tag page featuring your content, with dated screenshots. Note the domain carefully, copycats mimic the branding, and a notice filed against the wrong domain accomplishes nothing. Your evidence file also powers fast re-filing if content migrates.

Step 2: File through the site's own removal route

The site publishes a DMCA policy and states that properly identified infringing content will be removed. Locate the DMCA or contact link on the domain serving your content and send a complete notice: identification of your original work, every infringing URL, your good-faith and accuracy statements, and a signature (yours or your agent's). Some requests do get honored; many stall. Give it a few days while you continue below.

Step 3: Identify the hosting provider and CDN, and file there

Run the domain through WHOIS and urlscan.io. If a CDN such as Cloudflare fronts the site, submit an abuse report through the CDN, it forwards the complaint and can reveal the origin host. Then send your DMCA notice to the hosting provider's abuse contact. Hosts act on valid notices at a far higher rate than leak sites, because their own safe-harbor protection is on the line.

Step 4: Put the registrar on notice

The registrar named in WHOIS should receive a copy of your notice plus your record of the site's response (or silence). One complaint rarely suspends a domain, but registrars weigh accumulated evidence, and yours joins the file.

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

Submit all documented URLs to Google at reportcontent.google.com and to Bing through Microsoft's copyright infringement form. This is where the practical damage stops: once de-indexed, the post no longer surfaces when anyone searches your name. If the material is intimate imagery posted without consent, Google's non-consensual imagery removal path applies independently of copyright.

Step 6: Monitor for reposts and copycats

Search your name and handles weekly, and reverse-image-search your most-circulated photos. Copycat domains recycle each other's content, so expect to run the same process against a new domain occasionally, your saved notice makes each round a ten-minute job rather than a day's work.

What happens after you file

Typical pattern: the search engines act first, the host follows, and the site itself either quietly removes the post or never answers. Keep every confirmation email. If the same content resurfaces across domains, that recurrence, not any single takedown, is the real fight.

That ongoing fight is what Rulta is built for: it files takedowns for creators through its own agents, so your legal name stays off every notice, and its monitoring catches reposts across copycat domains before they spread.

This guide is educational information, not legal advice.

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

Frequently asked questions

Does InfluencersGoneWild honor its posted DMCA policy?

The site claims to remove infringing content on request, but creators report inconsistent and often slow enforcement. File with the site for the record, then rely on the host, registrar, and search-engine steps.

There seem to be several versions of the site. Which do I file against?

Copycat domains trade on the same name. Identify the exact domain serving your content and run the process against that domain, and repeat it for each copycat where your content appears.

Will my legal name be visible to the site?

A DMCA notice identifies its sender and may be forwarded. If an authorized agent files on your behalf, the agent's name appears instead of yours.

How fast can I expect results?

Hosting providers and search engines usually act within days to two weeks. The site itself may take longer or never respond.

Do I need to be the person in the photos to file a DMCA notice?

You need to own the copyright, typically that means you took the photo or video or hold the rights to it. If the content is intimate imagery of you posted without consent, separate non-consensual imagery removal routes also apply regardless of copyright.