takedowns is built for the reality of running an OnlyFans page in 2026: a subscriber leaks, a mirror scrapes, a tube site re-hosts, and the same clip shows up on twenty more by morning. We fingerprint your catalogue, watch every public source we can find, and dispatch signed DMCA takedowns in bulk.
Tube sites mirror each other. Reddit and Telegram channels cross-post. Forums embed. Google indexes what it finds. The only realistic response is automation that scales with you — not a DMCA you typed by hand at 2am.
Upload a reference set of your published photos and videos, or point us at a hosted folder. We derive perceptual fingerprints for every item and index them. Incremental updates when you publish new content — no re-uploading your entire archive.
We run scheduled reverse searches across tube aggregators, free clip sites, Reddit cross-posts, public Telegram channels, and Google dorking patterns specific to OnlyFans re-uploads. New findings land in your dashboard within hours, not weeks.
Review a batch of findings, sign a single DMCA notice, and broadcast to every matched host at once. Per-host abuse contacts are looked up automatically. Every dispatch is logged with timestamps, recipient, and a tamper-evident copy.
Successful removals aren't the end. The same fingerprint stays in the index, and the system keeps watching. If the same content reappears on a new host, you'll see it in the queue and a one-click re-dispatch sends a fresh notice to that host's abuse contact.
The major re-host networks that mirror content across hundreds of domains.
Clipping sites that index and re-publish OnlyFans content in shorter segments.
Subreddits that share, link, or re-host leaked content from various platforms.
Public channels distributing leaked content via file sharing.
Search engine queries designed to surface leaked content across the open web.
Image boards, link aggregators, and niche communities that re-host or embed.
Most OnlyFans leaks come from screen-recording subscribers, hacked third-party cloud storage, scraped mirrors, and re-uploads to free clip and tube sites. Once a single copy surfaces, it propagates across dozens of hosts within days. takedowns is built around this reality — we don't just look for the first leak, we look for the entire downstream re-upload graph.
Yes. As the copyright holder of content you created, you can issue DMCA takedown notices to any host serving your content without authorization. takedowns automates the entire dispatch workflow at scale — bulk review, sign, send, log, re-check.
OnlyFans operates a takedown service for egregious cases, but creators report long wait times and inconsistent results. A dedicated workflow that runs independently of the platform is the realistic answer for high-volume creators with a steady publication cadence.
Most major platforms process DMCA notices within 24–72 hours. Smaller tube sites and free clip hosts vary. takedowns re-checks each target URL automatically and flags content that's still up after the expected window for escalation or counter-notice handling.
Yes, with caveats. We maintain a registry of abuse contacts for hundreds of hosts worldwide, including regional tube networks and non-English-language platforms. Where a host has a published abuse contact, we can dispatch to it. Where a host ignores DMCA, we surface that as a finding so you can escalate through your legal counsel.
No. You only need to upload a reference set — typically watermarked or low-resolution copies. We derive perceptual fingerprints from those references and use them for matching. Your original high-resolution masters never leave your storage.
Yes. You retain copyright in original works you created. Dispatching a DMCA notice to a host that is hosting your content without authorization is a standard remedy under copyright law in most jurisdictions. takedowns is a workflow tool, not legal counsel — for case-specific legal questions, consult a lawyer.
Per-content pricing. No monthly commitment. Start with a free catalogue scan.