Legal

DMCA Notice

How to file a Digital Millennium Copyright Act takedown notice with Leapjuice. We take copyright seriously and respond to valid notices within 24 hours.

Last updated: January 2026

1. DMCA notice requirements

Leapjuice respects intellectual property rights. If you believe content hosted on our platform infringes your copyright, you may file a DMCA takedown notice. Under 17 U.S.C. §512(c)(3), your notice must include the following:

A physical or electronic signature of the copyright owner or authorized agent. Identification of the copyrighted work claimed to have been infringed. Identification of the infringing material with enough detail for us to locate it. Your contact information (address, phone, email). A statement that you have a good faith belief the use is not authorized. A statement, under penalty of perjury, that the information is accurate and you are authorized to act on behalf of the copyright owner.

2. How to file a notice

Send your DMCA notice to [email protected]. We respond to valid notices within 24 hours.

Include all six elements above. Incomplete notices will be rejected with an explanation of what is missing.

3. Designated agent

Our designated DMCA agent is:

Leapjuice DMCA Agent, [email protected], 123 Example St, Nashua, NH 03060, USA

4. Counter notification

If you believe your content was removed in error, you may file a DMCA counter notification. Your counter notification must include your physical or electronic signature, identification of the removed material, a statement under penalty of perjury that you have a good faith belief the material was removed in error, your consent to the jurisdiction of a federal court, and your contact information.

Send counter notifications to [email protected]. We will forward the counter notification to the original complainant and may restore the content after 10-14 business days per DMCA procedure.

5. Repeat infringers

We terminate accounts of repeat infringers in accordance with the DMCA. We maintain a record of DMCA notices received and accounts terminated.

6. False claims

Knowingly making a false DMCA claim is perjury under federal law (17 U.S.C. §512(f)). We reserve the right to seek damages from any party that knowingly makes a false claim.

7. Other disputes

For copyright disputes that do not fall under the DMCA (for example, foreign copyrights or non-copyright intellectual property), please contact us at [email protected] and we will work with you in good faith.

Questions?

DMCA notices: [email protected]

Other legal inquiries: [email protected]

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