
Content Trackdown is a content-protection service for creators, agencies, and legal teams. It scans the open web for stolen or leaked content, and when it finds a match, it files the DMCA takedown for you and tracks the case until the content is gone. The pitch is simple: your face, your brand, protected everywhere — AI monitoring plus automated takedowns across more than 150 platforms, with leaks found and removed in hours rather than weeks.
Why I built it
If you make a living selling content — especially adult creators, but not only them — your work gets stolen constantly. A clip gets recompressed and reposted to a tube site. A screenshot lands in a Telegram channel. A recording shows up in a subreddit, on X, in an image host, buried in Google image search. And every one of those is a sale you didn't make and a piece of your likeness you didn't consent to sharing.
The old way of dealing with this is miserable. You either spend half your week manually searching for your own leaks and filing takedowns one at a time, or you pay an agency a lot of money to do the same tedious work by hand. Either way it's slow, it's reactive, and it never ends — the same content just gets re-uploaded somewhere new the moment you knock it down. I wanted to turn that whole grind into something that runs on its own. As I put it on the site, this is the full stack of protection, not a glorified search alert.
What it actually does
The core is content matching that holds up in the real world. Leaks don't stay pristine — filenames change, faces get blurred, screenshots get recompressed, video gets screen-recorded. So the matching scans image, video, and text across the open web and is built to catch content even after it's been degraded and disguised. On top of matching sits the automation: when the engine finds a match, it files the takedown on your behalf, handles the platform-specific DMCA flow, and tracks the case from detected to removed.
Around that, a few pieces that matter:
Watermarking and fingerprints. You stamp content before it leaves your hands and fingerprint it so re-scans can match against it later. There are templates for text, logo, and transparent overlays.
Coverage. The scan runs across OnlyFans, Instagram, Reddit, X, Chaturbate, Google search results, tube sites, image hosts, file lockers, and more — over 150 platforms, and I keep adding.
A legal network. Some cases need a human — non-US jurisdictions, repeat infringers, contested takedowns. Higher plans get access to a network of vetted DMCA attorneys for exactly those.
Agency and white-label. Agencies run every client from one dashboard, with white-label reporting, per-client API keys, and revenue share if they resell.
How it works
I built the flow to get someone from signup to their first removal fast. Onboarding is meant to take under five minutes: you add the content URLs, image hashes, or your handle on the platforms you publish to. From there the crawlers and matchers run continuously, and new matches surface in your dashboard with a confidence score and the platform context. You approve a takedown with one click, and the system handles the rest. Then it reports back — monthly removal reports and white-label PDFs you can hand to a client or your team.
The dashboard is the part I care about most. The idea was to put every leak and every takedown in one place, so instead of hunting you're just watching matches roll in and firing takedowns as they land.
Stop chasing leaks. Start running the playbook.
Where it stands
By the numbers the site reports, Content Trackdown protects 4,200+ creators, has issued 12M+ takedowns, and runs at a 98% average removal rate with 24/7 monitoring. For the platforms that matter most — OnlyFans, Instagram, X — most takedowns land within 24 to 48 hours; image hosts and file lockers usually clear within a week.
Pricing starts at $19/mo and scales up from there. For solo creators and small teams there's Pro at $29/mo, Premier at $79/mo, and Legend at $159/mo, with team seats, API access, video fingerprinting, and legal integration layering in as you climb. For agencies there's a separate track — Agency Starter at $299/mo for up to 25 clients, Agency Pro at $599/mo for up to 100, and a custom Enterprise tier — each with white-label dashboards and revenue share. Every plan starts with a 30-day free trial, full access, no credit card.
I positioned it directly against the incumbents — BranditScan, Rulta, DMCA.com — because I've watched creators bounce between those services for years. The bet is that better matching catches the re-uploads and screen-recordings the others miss, that unlimited takedowns beat monthly caps, and that you shouldn't have to sit through a custom-quote sales cycle just to protect your own work. It's the dashboard I wish creators had two years ago.
