Free piracy scan
Send us your course name and your official page. We search the aggregator sites, mirrors, and reupload venues where course piracy concentrates, and send you a report of everything we find. No charge, no obligation, no account access.
A plain email, written by a person, containing:
If we find nothing, we say so, and we tell you what to watch for. A clean scan is a good result, not a sales failure.
Creators who sell their own courses, add-ons, or paid tutorials: 3D and design educators especially, since that is the venue circuit we know best, but any course creator can request a scan. If you suspect your work is circulating, or you have never checked, this is the fastest way to know.
Email [email protected] with the subject line "Free scan". Include your course or product name and a link to your official sales page. That is all we need. The report lands in your inbox within 48 hours.
We never publish who asked for a scan, and we never share what we find with anyone but you.
You get the report and decide. If you want the listings gone, we file everything for $79 per course, pay on success: a removal counts when the listing is de-indexed from Google Search or the file is removed at the host. If you would rather file yourself, our removal guides walk through the exact steps for each venue, free. Either way, the report is yours.
The scan is a full report, delivered whether or not you buy anything. It ends with one paragraph offering our paid filing service, and that is the whole pitch. Plenty of people take the report and file themselves using our guides; that is a fine outcome for us.
We use your course name and URL to run the scan, and we keep the findings so a follow-up scan can spot new listings. We never publish who asked, never share the findings, and never add you to a mailing list. One report, then silence unless you reply.
Nothing, unless you say so. There is no automatic follow-up sequence. If you want the listings removed, reply and we file. If you want to handle it yourself, use the guides. If you want a second scan later, ask.