Content Trackdown
For creators, brands, and legal teams

Get stolen content
delisted from Google.

Automated DMCA filing through Google's official copyright removal channel. Web search, Images, News, and Discover — handled correctly the first time, with a 48-hour average delisting.

12M+ takedowns filed · Trusted by creators, agencies, and in-house legal

Scanning 150+ platforms, including

The problem

Google is the discovery engine for every leak.

When someone searches your name, your handle, or your stage name, the leak URLs are often what they find. Tube sites optimize for branded queries. Leak forums show up in image search. Defamatory blog posts rank above your own website. Google didn't create the problem, but the index is what turns a single bad URL into a years-long reputation issue.

Google's removal flow exists, and it works — but it's genuinely fiddly. The form has specific declaration language. Web requests, image requests, and News requests use different channels. A rejected first submission means resubmitting with additional documentation. Most creators give up after one or two attempts.

We file thousands of these every month. We know the format Google accepts, the surfaces we need to cover, and how to handle contested cases. The point is to clean up the branded SERP and keep it clean.

How we handle Google delisting

Four steps. Google-shaped.

01

Map your search footprint

We index how your content currently appears in Google — by your handle, your stage name, your titles, your image searches — so we know exactly what needs cleaning up.

02

Continuous SERP monitoring

Google's index changes daily. We watch your branded queries, image results, and News mentions for new infringing URLs as they appear and re-rank.

03

File through Google's removal tool

Each notice goes through Google's official Copyright Removal request — properly formatted, with the right declarations, and submitted as a sworn party.

04

Track delisting + re-check rankings

Every removed URL is monitored. If Google reverses a removal — which they sometimes do on appeal — we re-file. We also re-check your branded SERP weekly to catch new leaks early.

Every Google surface

Web, Images, News — all of it cleaned up.

Each surface has its own removal flow. We handle all of them.

Google Search delisting

Remove URLs from Google web search results so the leak stops showing up for your name, your handle, or your branded queries. The URL stays online — but Google stops sending traffic to it.

Google Images removal

Photo leaks indexed in Google Images get removed at the image-result level, not just the page level. Reverse-image discovery of your content drops dramatically once the index is clean.

Google News + Discover takedowns

Defamatory news mentions, syndicated reposts, and Discover entries get filed through the Google News-specific channel — which is faster than standard web removal for press content.

Country-specific delisting

Some removals only apply in certain regions. We can target country-specific Google domains where appropriate and track delisting by geography so you can verify per market.

Branded SERP cleanup

Comprehensive sweep of the first 10 pages of your branded queries. Premier plans include weekly re-scans of those queries to catch new leaks before they rank.

Re-index re-detection

Removed URLs that re-appear under a new path, a new subdomain, or with cache poisoning get caught and re-filed automatically. Google's index is a moving target — we treat it as one.

48h
average delisting time
97%
Google approval rate
10+
Google surfaces covered
24/7
SERP monitoring

FAQ

Questions on Google removal.

Does removing a URL from Google delete the actual page?+

No, and that's an important distinction. Google delisting removes the URL from search results so people stop finding it through search — but the page itself stays online on the host's server. For full removal you also need a DMCA against the host. We do both in parallel: file with Google for fast delisting and with the host for permanent takedown.

How long does Google take to delist a URL?+

For well-formed copyright requests, Google's typical response is 24-72 hours. Image results and News content tend to be on the faster end. We've seen contested or ambiguous cases take a couple of weeks, but the vast majority of our cases are delisted within two business days.

Can you remove content from Google Images specifically?+

Yes. Google Images is one of our highest-volume removal channels for creators. Image results require their own removal flow (different from web results), and we file through the correct one so the photo stops appearing in image search and reverse-image discovery.

What if Google rejects my removal request?+

It happens — usually because the request was malformed, because the URL didn't clearly contain infringing content, or because the host has contested it. We handle the resubmission, the supplementary documentation, and where appropriate the escalation to a sworn legal declaration. Rejected first-pass requests don't mean the case is dead.

Do I need to remove the original page first?+

No. The Google removal and the host DMCA can — and usually should — run in parallel. Even if the host eventually removes the page, Google's cached snippet can keep appearing for a while. Filing both at once is faster and cleaner.

Clean up the SERP.
Keep it clean.

30-day free trial. Full access to Google delisting, image and News removal, and weekly SERP re-checks.

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