The Digital Millennium Copyright Act gives copyright owners a powerful tool to remove stolen images from websites quickly. Here's exactly how to use it.
What Is the DMCA?
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) is a US federal law passed in 1998 that governs digital copyright. Section 512 of the DMCA established a "safe harbour" for platforms hosting user-generated content — but only if they respond promptly to takedown notices.
This means that when you find your photo on a website, blog, or social media platform without your permission, you can send a DMCA takedown notice and the platform is legally obligated to act.
Who Can File a DMCA Takedown?
You can file a DMCA notice if you are:
- The original creator and copyright owner of the image
- An exclusive licensee with enforcement rights
- An authorised agent of the copyright owner
You must have a good faith belief that the use is not authorised by you, the law, or a licence. Filing a knowingly false DMCA notice exposes you to liability under 17 U.S.C. § 512(f).
What Must a DMCA Notice Include?
A valid DMCA takedown notice must contain:
- Your identification — full name, address, phone number, and email
- Identification of the copyrighted work — describe your original image and link to where you've published it
- Identification of the infringing material — the exact URL where the stolen image appears
- A statement of good faith — "I have a good faith belief that the use of the material is not authorised..."
- A statement of accuracy — "I swear, under penalty of perjury, that the information in this notice is accurate..."
- Your signature — electronic signature is accepted
Missing any of these elements can result in your notice being rejected.
Where Do You Send a DMCA Notice?
Send your notice to the platform's designated DMCA agent. Every major platform is required to register one with the US Copyright Office.
Common agents:
- Google/YouTube: legal-support@google.com
- Facebook/Instagram: dedicated online form
- Twitter/X: copyright@twitter.com
- WordPress.com: dmca@automattic.com
- Generic websites: Find the hosting company via WHOIS, then locate their DMCA agent
ImageClaim identifies the correct agent automatically and generates the notice for you.
How Long Does a Platform Have to Respond?
The DMCA doesn't specify an exact timeframe, but the "expeditious" standard in practice means:
- Major platforms typically respond within 24–72 hours
- Smaller hosts may take 1–2 weeks
- Unresponsive hosts may expose themselves to copyright liability
What Is a Counter-Notice?
If the alleged infringer believes their use was lawful (e.g., fair use), they can file a DMCA counter-notice. If they do:
- The platform notifies you
- You have 10–14 business days to file a lawsuit or the content goes back up
- Filing a lawsuit requires US federal court jurisdiction
For significant infringements, this is where legal representation becomes important.
DMCA Limitations: What It Can't Do
- It only applies to US-hosted content or platforms subject to US law
- It cannot force payment of compensation (that requires civil litigation)
- It cannot prevent re-uploads by the same infringer
- It doesn't apply to content hosted in countries without similar laws
For non-US infringements, cease and desist letters and local legal action are more effective.