Socialix respects intellectual-property rights. If you believe content processed or delivered through Socialix infringes a right you hold, you can submit a takedown notice and we will act on valid notices. This process serves both DMCA notices and notice-and-action under EU law. It complements our Acceptable Use Policy.
1. How to submit a notice
To allow us to act, your notice should include:
- identification of the copyrighted work or other right you claim;
- identification of the specific material you believe infringes, with enough detail to locate it (e.g. the link, output, or account on Socialix);
- your name, address, and a means of contacting you;
- a statement that you have a good-faith belief the use is not authorized by the rights holder, its agent, or the law;
- a statement that the information in your notice is accurate and that you are the rights holder or authorized to act on their behalf; and
- your physical or electronic signature.
2. Submit a notice
The fastest way to reach us is the form below — it goes straight to our moderation team. You can also email your notice to [email protected]. Our full provider details, including postal address, are in our Impressum. [If we rely on the US DMCA safe harbor, the designated agent and any registration details will be listed here — confirm with counsel.]
3. What happens next
We review valid notices promptly and may remove or disable access to the material in question and notify the affected user. We may terminate the accounts of users who repeatedly infringe. Please note that once an output has been delivered to a destination you connected (such as a Telegram or Discord chat), it has left our systems and we cannot retract copies already delivered elsewhere, though we will make best efforts to assist.
4. Counter-notice
If your content was removed and you believe this was a mistake or misidentification, you may submit a counter-notice to the same contact, including identification of the removed material, your contact details, a statement under the applicable law that you have a good-faith belief the removal was an error, and your signature. We may restore the material in accordance with applicable law.
5. Misuse
Submitting a notice or counter-notice that knowingly misrepresents that material is infringing — or was removed in error — may expose you to liability for damages under applicable law.