Removal guide

How to remove your course from AeBlender

AeBlender is an aggregator site that posts unauthorized copies of paid Blender and 3D course material. It does not host the files itself: the site explicitly disclaims hosting and links out to third-party file lockers, which changes how removal works.

Does AeBlender honor DMCA notices?

AeBlender publishes no direct DMCA email. Because the files live on external lockers, the effective targets are three: the file locker holding the actual course files, Google Search, and the site's infrastructure provider. We filed against AeBlender in July 2026 using all three layers, and the locker layer is the one this venue adds over other aggregators.

The DIY route

Step 1: File with the file locker that holds your course

Open the AeBlender post for your course and note where the download links point. Do not assume the locker; check the link. In our filing the locker was send.cm (which operates under the send.now brand), not one of the better-known hosts. Lockers are businesses with DMCA processes, which makes this the most likely layer to get the file itself deleted.

For send.cm / send.now specifically, from our filing: the route is a plain-text email to [email protected] containing seven elements: your identity as owner (or your agent's authority), your contact details, a description of the work with its official URL, the infringing file URLs, a good-faith statement, a statement under penalty of perjury that the notice is accurate and you are authorized, and your true-name signature. Other lockers publish similar requirements on their DMCA pages.

Step 2: File a Google Search removal request

This removes the AeBlender post itself from search results, which is where its traffic comes from.

  1. Search your course name plus "free download" and copy the exact AeBlender URL from the results.
  2. Submit it at https://reportcontent.google.com/forms/dmca_search (Google account required): your full legal name and country, the course name, your official sales page as the example of the work, the infringing URL, the sworn statements, and the human check. Confirmation arrives by email immediately; progress is visible in Google's removals dashboard.

Step 3: File a Cloudflare abuse report

AeBlender sits behind Cloudflare; Cloudflare accepted our report for aeblender.com. At https://abuse.cloudflare.com, file the DMCA report with your details, the post URL, and the original work's URL, tick the human-verification checkbox, and submit. Cloudflare forwards the notice to the site owner and hosting provider and confirms by email.

What to expect, from our filings

Google acknowledged immediately and the listing stopped surfacing for course-name searches within days, inside Google's stated two-week window. The locker notice went out the same day as the rest of our filing; locker compliance timelines vary by operator, and we report file-level outcomes as they land rather than promising them. Cloudflare forwards but does not remove; treat it as pressure on the host, not a removal in itself.

Time cost

Budget 30 to 40 minutes for the first listing: the two forms plus identifying the locker and writing its notice email, which is the step unique to this venue. Rechecks a few days later confirm what came down and what needs a second pass.

Or have us file it

Delister files all three layers for you, plus every other venue hosting your course, 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. Start with the free scan and see the full list first.