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How to Remove Content from Coomer: DMCA Takedown Guide

8 min read
Privly Team

Coomer (operating as coomer.party and coomer.su) is a subscription content aggregation platform specifically designed to archive and distribute leaked content from subscription services like OnlyFans, Patreon, and similar creators. The site has become a primary repository for leaks and operates across multiple domains to evade takedown efforts. Removing your content from Coomer requires understanding its multi-domain infrastructure and filing coordinated DMCA notices across all its operational variants.

Coomer's infrastructure is specifically designed to be resistant to takedowns through redundancy and domain multiplication. When coomer.party receives DMCA notices, content often reappears on coomer.su or other variants within hours. The platform uses Cloudflare for CDN services and is hosted across multiple server locations. The domain registrars vary by specific Coomer domain, but all variants are ultimately controlled by the same organization. Understanding this structure is critical—you cannot effectively remove your content from Coomer by targeting only one domain. Effective removal requires filing DMCA notices with all known Coomer domain variants simultaneously, targeting Cloudflare to disable CDN delivery, and pursuing the domain registrars for each domain separately.

Before filing DMCA notices, comprehensively document your content across all Coomer variants. Search coomer.party, coomer.su, and any other known variants for content bearing your name or identifying characteristics. Record the exact URL of every archive, post, and gallery containing your content. Coomer typically organizes content by creator profiles, so check if a profile exists with your name and document all content within that profile. Screenshot multiple pages of each profile and archive to preserve evidence. Note upload dates, any comments or descriptions, and file names if visible. Create a master spreadsheet listing every URL found on every Coomer variant—this document becomes your evidence of systematic infringement and guides your DMCA filing strategy.

DMCA notices to Coomer must address multiple operational layers simultaneously. File with coomer.party's legal department, coomer.su's legal department, and any other known variants. Your notices must clearly identify each copyrighted work, provide specific URLs from each Coomer variant, include your contact information, and contain a statement under penalty of perjury. File separate notices for each domain variant rather than bundling them, as registrars and hosts handle them separately. Simultaneously, file with Cloudflare for each Coomer domain, providing the specific content URLs and requesting CDN removal. Cloudflare typically processes these requests within 24 hours. Additionally, file abuse reports with each domain's registrar—provide them with copies of your DMCA notice and request domain suspension for repeated copyright violations. While registrars rarely suspend domains immediately, accumulating reports increases compliance pressure.

Google de-indexing is crucial because Coomer content is heavily indexed and discoverable through searches for creator names. File removal requests in Google Search Console for every Coomer URL containing your content across all domain variants. Google processes these requests within 48 hours typically. Many people discover your leaked content on Coomer through Google searches, so de-indexing removes the primary discovery mechanism. Submit supplementary de-indexing requests through Google's Copyright Removal Tool. The multi-domain nature of Coomer means your de-indexing campaign must address content on coomer.party, coomer.su, and other variants. If content reappears on new Coomer domains, repeat the DMCA and de-indexing process. After 2-3 removal cycles, persistent enforcement typically results in permanent suppression as the cost and effort become prohibitive. Privly's automated system continuously monitors all Coomer variants and handles removal enforcement, ensuring your content remains suppressed long-term.

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