June 20265 min read

How to remove your content from Erome

By 1Kyle8, OnlyFans creatorReviewed by Zander SmallUpdated June 2026

The short answer

To remove your content from Erome, file a DMCA notice through Erome's own DMCA/Abuse report route, listing the exact album URLs and your copyright. Erome runs a designated DMCA agent and usually acts within a few business days. Also submit the URLs to Google and Bing so the pages stop showing in search, and re-file if copies reappear.

What Erome is

Erome is a user-upload media host. People create albums of photos, videos, and GIFs and share them through public links, and a large share of that content is adult. That matters here, because unlike a lot of leak sites, Erome is a real platform with a working abuse process, not an anonymous mirror with no way to reach anyone. The problem is that anyone can upload, so paywalled work from OnlyFans or Fansly gets posted into albums by people who don't own it, and the same file often gets copied back out to aggregator sites that are far less cooperative.

Step-by-step: removing your content from Erome

  1. List every album URL. Note each Erome album and page showing your content, not just a profile. Each URL gets filed.
  2. Use Erome's DMCA/Abuse route. Erome links a DMCA/Abuse report from its site and lists a designated DMCA agent. Use the contact shown there. This is the good news with Erome: there is an actual channel, and it tends to respond.
  3. Send a DMCA § 512-compliant notice (17 U.S.C. § 512). Include your copyrighted work, the exact infringing URLs, a good-faith statement, the under-penalty-of-perjury statement, your contact, and a signature. One caution: a takedown notice can become a public record, so file under a name you're fine having on record, or have a service file under its name to keep your real identity off the paperwork.
  4. De-list from search in parallel. Submit the URLs to Google's and Bing's copyright removal forms so the album stops surfacing in search even before Erome pulls it. For most creators, getting it out of Google matters as much as deleting the file.
  5. Re-file on re-upload. Open upload hosts get the same content re-posted by new accounts, and Erome content tends to leak onward to aggregators. Keep watching and re-send.

Why Erome is harder than it looks

Erome itself is comparatively cooperative, so the single notice usually works. The friction is everything around it. Anyone can re-upload the same file under a fresh account, your real name can land in a public record if you file by hand, and the content often gets mirrored out to leak aggregators that ignore notices entirely. Erome also routes its DNS through Cloudflare and serves media through a CDN, so if you ever need to escalate past the site, confirm the current host with a WHOIS or host lookup rather than trusting an old guide.

Let Fanlock handle Erome for you

We file the Erome notice under Fanlock's name, so your legal identity never lands in a public takedown record, and we use the right route to get a fast pull. Then we do the part that actually keeps it gone. We de-list the pages from Google, Bing, and Yahoo, watch for re-uploads and copies that spread to other leak sites, and re-file when content reappears. The Telegram channels that feed aggregators are exactly what we monitor. And Pirate-Intent Search keeps watch well past Erome, running the queries leak-hunters use across 4M+ leak sites, so a copy that escapes to an aggregator surfaces to us the moment it lands. Our Google removals run about 97.5%, which you can confirm yourself in Google's public Transparency Report.

FAQ

Does Erome have a DMCA process?

Yes. Erome links a DMCA/Abuse report from its site and uses a designated DMCA agent, and it tends to act on valid notices within a few business days. That makes it more responsive than most leak aggregators, where there's often no working contact at all.

How long does it take to remove content from Erome?

A complete, valid notice usually gets a response within a few business days, and search de-listing through Google and Bing runs on a similar timeline. The slow part is rarely Erome itself, it's the re-uploads and the copies that spread to other sites.

Will removing it from Erome also get it out of Google?

Not automatically. Deleting the album and de-listing it from search are two separate jobs. File the Erome notice and submit the same URLs to Google's and Bing's removal forms so the pages stop appearing in search even if there's any lag.

What if my content gets re-uploaded to Erome or copied to other sites?

Expect both. Open upload hosts get the same file re-posted, and Erome content often gets mirrored to aggregators. The fix is ongoing monitoring plus re-filing, which is where doing it by hand turns into a grind.

Will my real name be exposed if I file with Erome 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 Erome right now

Run a free scan with just your username and we'll show you where you're exposed, on Erome and everywhere else, then handle the removals for you. No card, no selfie until you've seen what we found.

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Fanlock removes your content from Erome automatically

You don't have to do any of this by hand. Sign up and Fanlock finds your content on Erome (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.

Start Free Scan
1Kyle8

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 →