DMCA takedown process. Notice, counter-notice, and safe harbor.
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) of 1998 created a notice-and-takedown system that lets copyright holders request removal of infringing content from internet platforms (hosting providers, social media, video platforms). In exchange for compliance with the procedures, platforms receive "safe harbor" protection from copyright infringement liability. This guide covers how to file a DMCA notice as a copyright holder, how to respond with a counter-notice as an accused user, and what platforms must do.
Start here.
The DMCA notice and safe harbor framework lives in Section 512 of the Copyright Act.
Platforms that follow the process are shielded from infringement liability for user content.
Copyright holder sends formal notice to platform; platform removes content.
Accused user can respond; if no lawsuit filed within 10-14 days, content is restored.
False takedown notices made knowingly are subject to penalties under Section 512(f).
The full picture.
Sending a DMCA takedown notice
As a copyright holder: identify the infringing material (URL or description). Send to the platform's Designated Agent (listed at copyright.gov DMCA Designated Agents Directory). Notice must include: identification of work, identification of infringing material, contact info, statement of good-faith belief, statement under penalty of perjury, your signature.
What a notice must contain
Under Section 512(c)(3): (a) physical or electronic signature; (b) identification of the work claimed; (c) identification of the allegedly infringing material with enough detail to find it; (d) your contact information; (e) statement that you have good-faith belief that use is not authorized; (f) statement under penalty of perjury that the information is accurate and you are authorized to act for the copyright holder.
Platform action
Upon receiving a valid notice, the platform "expeditiously" removes or disables access to the material. Platform notifies the user who posted it.
Counter-notice (response)
User who posted the material can file a counter-notice claiming the material was wrongly removed. Counter-notice must include: signature; identification of removed material; statement under penalty of perjury that removal was due to mistake or misidentification; user's name, address, phone; consent to jurisdiction in user's judicial district (or to federal court if outside US).
After counter-notice
Platform forwards counter-notice to the original claimant. If the claimant does not file a lawsuit within 10-14 business days, the platform restores the material.
Repeat infringer policy
Platforms must terminate accounts of repeat infringers under Section 512(i). Definition of "repeat infringer" varies by platform.
Misuse
False takedown notices made knowingly trigger liability under Section 512(f) for the false claimant. Damages can include legal fees and harm to the user.
Common scenarios
YouTube videos using copyrighted music. Reposted articles on news aggregators. Pirated software downloads. Infringing photos on social media. Counterfeit listings on e-commerce platforms.
Common questions.
What is a Designated Agent?
What happens after I send a notice?
What if I receive a counter-notice?
Can I send a takedown for fair use content?
What if my content was wrongly removed?
Do all platforms comply?
Cost?
Can I use a service?
IP setup, done right.
Trademark filing, copyright registration, attorney-vetted IP assignment, and connection to specialty IP attorneys for patents.
This guide is educational. Specific IP decisions require professional legal advice.
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