June 20265 min read

How to remove your content from LeakedZone

By 1Kyle8, OnlyFans creatorReviewed by Zander SmallUpdated June 2026

The short answer

To remove your content from LeakedZone, file a DMCA notice listing the exact URLs and your copyright. LeakedZone rarely publishes a working DMCA contact, so identify its current host or CDN with a WHOIS lookup and file there. Then submit the URLs to Google and Bing to de-list them, and re-file when mirror domains repost.

What LeakedZone is

LeakedZone is a leak-gallery site. It collects and reposts paywalled photos and videos from OnlyFans, Fansly, and similar platforms, pulled without permission and usually scraped from Telegram channels and other leak boards. The thing that makes LeakedZone its own headache is the way it spreads. It runs across multiple domains and mirror servers at once, so the same set of images can sit on several addresses, and copies get archived in places that outlive any single takedown. Removing one page is the start of the job, not the end of it.

Step-by-step: removing your content from LeakedZone

  1. List every URL. Write down the exact LeakedZone pages showing your content, on every mirror domain you can find, not just the main one. Each address is filed separately, so a thorough list up front saves you a second pass.
  2. Find the route, expect no contact. Check the site for a DMCA or abuse page. LeakedZone usually has no working one, so go over its head. Run a WHOIS or host lookup on the current domain to find the host or CDN. These sites often sit behind Cloudflare, which is a proxy rather than the host, so file with Cloudflare to surface the origin and then file with that host directly. Verify the current host every time, because it moves.
  3. 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 your signature. This notice can become a public record, so file under a name you're willing to have on file, or have a service file under its name so your legal identity stays off the paperwork.
  4. De-list from search in parallel. Submit the URLs to Google's and Bing's copyright removal forms. Even when LeakedZone drags its feet, getting the pages out of search means almost nobody finds them, which for a lot of creators is most of the battle.
  5. Re-file when mirrors repost. The same content tends to resurface on a sibling domain. Keep a list of the mirrors, keep watching, and re-send. This is the part that grinds you down by hand.

Why LeakedZone is hard to remove from

The mirror-domain habit is the real problem. You can win a takedown on one address and watch the same gallery still load on another, with no DMCA contact to write to and a CDN sitting in front of the actual host. Add offshore hosting and an archive culture that keeps old copies around, and a single notice rarely closes it. It is doable. It is also a repeating job, which is exactly why people hand it off.

Let Fanlock handle LeakedZone for you

We trace the real host behind each LeakedZone mirror, file under Fanlock's name so your identity never lands in a public takedown record, and escalate past hosts and CDNs that ignore the first notice. We de-list the pages from Google, Bing, and Yahoo, and we re-file automatically when the content pops up on the next domain. The Telegram channels that feed galleries like this are part of what we watch, so we catch copies as they spread instead of after. That head start comes from Pirate-Intent Search, our approach to searching Google for the phrases leak-hunters use to track you down, so a copy on the next LeakedZone mirror reaches us the moment it appears. 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 LeakedZone?

Yes. You own the copyright to your content the moment you create it, and that gives you the right to demand removal of unauthorized copies under the DMCA. You don't need a registered copyright to file a valid notice.

How long does it take to remove content from LeakedZone?

A cooperative host usually acts within days of a valid notice, and search de-listing is similar. Leak galleries are slower and often unresponsive, so plan to escalate to the host, the CDN, and the search engines rather than wait on the site.

Does LeakedZone have a DMCA process?

Often there's no working contact at all. When that's the case you skip the site and file with its hosting provider or CDN, which is the route that actually gets results. Identify the current host with a WHOIS lookup first, since it changes.

What if my content shows up on a different LeakedZone domain?

Expect it. LeakedZone mirrors itself across several domains, so treat each one as its own target and re-file. Monitoring the source channels lets you catch a new mirror faster than checking by hand.

Will my real name be exposed if I file the notice myself?

It can be, because DMCA notices can become public records. Filing under a service's name keeps your legal identity off the record while the content still comes down.

See if your content is on LeakedZone right now

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

Start Free Scan

Fanlock removes your content from LeakedZone automatically

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