Copyright & DMCA Policy

Last updated: October 29, 2025

VDO.Ninja is a real-time, peer-to-peer tool. We do not host or store user media after a session ends. Reported URLs typically reference ephemeral room or stream identifiers, not hosted files.

Even so, we respect intellectual-property rights and process valid notices under the U.S. DMCA (17 U.S.C. §512) and analogous laws.


How to Submit a Notice

Email: [email protected] Subject: “DMCA Notice – VDO.Ninja”

Include all of the following (required by law):

  1. Your contact info (full name, role/company, email, and a mailing address).

  2. Identification of the copyrighted work you claim is infringed (title, owner, links to the authorized source).

  3. The exact URL(s) on VDO.Ninja you claim are infringing (e.g., a page with ?view= or room link).

    Note: Links are typically temporary and may no longer resolve.

  4. A good-faith statement that you believe the use is not authorized by the owner, agent, or the law.

  5. A statement under penalty of perjury that the information in your notice is accurate and that you are the copyright owner or authorized to act for the owner.

  6. Your physical or electronic signature (typing your full name is acceptable).

Do not send illegal media. For child-safety material, report directly to your national hotline (e.g., Cybertip.ca / NCMEC) and include the hotline report number in your email to us.


What We May Do

Because we do not host user media, “removal” typically means disabling the specific link or token reported (when technically feasible) or applying edge-level restrictions (e.g., rate-limits, IP/ASN blocks, geofencing). We may preserve minimal incident metadata if legally required.

We may forward the essence of your notice to the affected user/host (if identifiable) or to our infrastructure providers.


Counter-Notice

If you believe access was disabled in error, email [email protected] with:

  1. Your contact info (name, address, email).

  2. The specific URL(s)/link(s) disabled.

  3. A statement under penalty of perjury that the material was disabled due to mistake or misidentification.

  4. Your consent to the jurisdiction of the courts in your district (or Toronto, Ontario, Canada if outside the U.S.) and to accept service from the original complainant.

  5. Your physical or electronic signature (full name).

Where applicable, and if we have a way to contact the complainant, we may restore access after DMCA timelines (typically 10–14 business days) unless the complainant informs us they’ve filed court action.


Repeat-Infringer Policy

Where technically feasible, links or tokens associated with multiple valid notices within a reasonable period may be restricted or disabled. Given the Service’s ephemeral, P2P nature, this may involve link/token disablement or edge-level measures, not deletion of stored media.


Misrepresentation

Knowingly submitting false claims or counter-notices may lead to liability under 17 U.S.C. §512(f) and applicable laws.


Contact

Copyright Notices & Counter-Notices: [email protected] (Plain descriptions only—no illegal media.)

For general safety/abuse guidance, see Abuse & Child Safety.

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