The short answer
To remove your content from Dirtyship, file a DMCA notice listing the exact URLs and your copyright. Dirtyship has no reliable DMCA contact, so send it to the host behind its Cloudflare proxy, found via a WHOIS lookup. Submit the same URLs to Google and Bing to de-list them, then re-file when the page reappears on another Dirtyship domain.
What Dirtyship is
Dirtyship is a tube-style leak aggregator. It scrapes and reposts clips and photos pulled from across the web, not just paywalled platforms. Public listings describe its content as leaked nudes from Twitch, Snapchat, YouTube, Instagram, and Patreon creators alongside OnlyFans, cosplay, and gamer-girl material. That wide net matters for how you remove it: your content can land there even if you never sold it, scraped from a public stream or a screen recording instead of a subscription feed. The site also runs under more than one domain, so a single takedown on one address does not clear copies sitting on its other ones.
Step-by-step: removing your content from Dirtyship
- List every URL. Note the exact Dirtyship pages showing your content, including the address bar domain on each one, because the site appears under several variants. Each URL is filed separately, so copy them all before you start.
- Find the route to the host. Check the site for a DMCA or abuse page first. As of mid-2026, public WHOIS records show Dirtyship's domains sitting behind Cloudflare's nameservers with the registrar listed as eNom, which means the real origin host is hidden by the proxy. Verify this yourself with a current WHOIS or host lookup, since it changes. When a site is Cloudflare-fronted, you file your notice through Cloudflare's abuse process so they can pass it to the origin host or name it.
- Send a § 512-compliant notice. Include your copyrighted work, the infringing URLs, a good-faith statement, the under-penalty-of-perjury statement, your contact, and a signature. This notice can become a public record, so file under a name you are willing to have on record, or have a service file under its name to keep your real identity off the paperwork.
- De-list from search in parallel. Submit the URLs to Google's and Bing's copyright removal forms so the pages stop surfacing in search even while the host is slow. For a creator being scraped off a public profile, getting the result out of Google often matters as much as deleting the original file.
- Re-file across the domain variants. Dirtyship re-posts fast and mirrors itself across its other domains. After the first removal, check the variants and re-send. This is the part that turns into a grind by hand.
Why Dirtyship is hard to remove from
Two things make this site stubborn. First, the Cloudflare proxy hides the origin host, so you cannot just email the server, you have to work through the CDN to reach whoever is actually storing the file. Second, the same operation runs under multiple domains, so removing a page from one address leaves copies live on the others. Add fast re-uploads and no working DMCA contact, and a manual fix means repeating the host hunt and the filing for every copy on every domain. It works. It is also a job.
Let Fanlock handle Dirtyship for you
We identify the real host behind Dirtyship's Cloudflare proxy, file under Fanlock's name so your identity never lands in a public takedown record, escalate past hosts that ignore the first notice, and de-list the pages from Google, Bing, and Yahoo. Because Dirtyship pulls from public streams and Telegram channels as well as paywalled feeds, we watch those sources and the site's domain variants together, so we catch re-uploads instead of waiting for you to find them. Pirate-Intent Search runs the searches a scraper would use to find you, so a copy on any of the domain variants tends to show up to us the moment it gets indexed. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, which you can confirm yourself in Google's public Transparency Report.
FAQ
Is it legal to remove my content from Dirtyship?
Yes. You own the copyright to your content the moment you create it, including a clip recorded off your public stream, which gives you the right to demand removal of unauthorized copies under the DMCA. You do not need a registered copyright to file.
How long does it take to remove content from Dirtyship?
A compliant host usually acts within days of a valid notice, and search de-listing runs on a similar timeline. Dirtyship itself can be slow or silent, which is when you escalate through Cloudflare to the origin host and push the URLs to Google and Bing in parallel.
Does Dirtyship have a DMCA process?
It may show a page, but these aggregators often have no working contact or ignore notices outright. When that happens you go over the site's head to the host behind its Cloudflare proxy, identified by a current WHOIS lookup, which is the more reliable route.
What if my content shows up on another Dirtyship domain after removal?
Expect it, because the site runs under several domains and re-posts quickly. The fix is monitoring the variants plus re-filing. A service that watches the source channels and the mirror domains can catch copies faster than checking each one by hand.
Will my real name be exposed if I file the Dirtyship notice myself?
It can be, because DMCA notices can become public records. Filing under a service's name keeps your legal identity off the paperwork while still getting the content removed.
See if your content is on Dirtyship right now
Run a free scan with just your username and we will show you where you are exposed, on Dirtyship and everywhere else, then handle the removals for you.
Fanlock removes your content from Dirtyship automatically
You don't have to do any of this by hand. Sign up and Fanlock finds your content on Dirtyship (and across search, social, and Telegram), files the takedowns under our name so your identity stays private, and re-files automatically when it reappears. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, verifiable in Google's public Transparency Report.
About 1Kyle8
OnlyFans creator
1Kyle8 is an OnlyFans creator who removed her own leaks with Fanlock. She writes these removal guides from experience; the technical and legal steps are reviewed by Zander Small, Fanlock co-founder. More about the Fanlock team →