For 3D and design educators
If you sell Blender, Cinema 4D, motion design, or UI courses and add-ons, your work does not leak onto generic torrent trackers. It shows up on a specific circuit of aggregator sites built around 3D and design education, usually within weeks of launch, and it sits there collecting your buyers' search traffic.
The pattern is consistent. A course or add-on launches, sells, and gets mirrored onto download aggregators that specialize in exactly this content. The listing carries your course name, your name, and a free download link, so anyone searching your course title sees the free copy next to your checkout page. The sites rarely publish a working DMCA contact, which is enough to make most creators give up after one attempt.
We file against these venues as our core work. Sites we have filed against include GFXFather, AeBlender, Psdly, Nullpk, DownloadPirate, HacksNation, and Design.rip, and we track others in the same circuit, such as Online-Courses.club. For the routes and response behavior we observed at each one, see the per-site removal guides.
It starts with a free scan. You send your course or add-on name and your official page; we send back a report listing every venue where we found it: named sites, live URLs, screenshots. If you tell us to proceed, we file the removals: DMCA notices where the venue or its file host accepts them, infrastructure abuse reports where it does not, and Google Search removal requests on every listing. You get a closing report showing what was filed where, with case references, and what came down.
The sweep: $79 per course, cleared across every site it is found on. Pay on success: a removal counts when the listing is de-indexed from Google Search or the file is removed at the host. If nothing comes down, you owe nothing.
Monitoring: $49 per month (Solo, one catalog) or $99 per month (Studio, multiple brands). We keep scanning and file new listings as they appear. The first 10 monitoring customers get their plan at $29 per month, for life.
Prices in USD, billed in EUR equivalent.
The scan is free, takes us under 48 hours, and carries no obligation. Most creators are surprised by the list.
Often yes, on the parts that are not the code. The GPL may cover your add-on's source, but your documentation, tutorial videos, course content, product pages, and brand name are separately protected works, and pirated bundles usually include them. Licensing questions like this are exactly what the free scan is for: we look at what is out there and tell you what is fileable before you spend anything.
We have not observed retaliation in our filings. The de-index route in particular acts on Google Search rather than on the site itself, so there is no account of yours to target and no interaction with the site's operators beyond a standard legal notice.
De-indexing removes the pirated listing from Google results, so it stops competing with your page for your own course name. That is the main harm these listings do, and it is the part of the process we control most reliably.
No. Filings are based on your ownership of the work, not on where you sell it. We only need your course details and a standard authorization statement; we never need access to any of your accounts.