DMCA & Content Removal

Last updated: June 2026.

FapStarsDB is a directory and reference work. We do not host original sexually explicit material; we index publicly available metadata (names, dates, scene titles, tags, low-resolution preview thumbnails supplied by the original studios under their affiliate-marketing terms) and link to the original producers. If you believe content referenced on this site infringes your rights, or if you are the performer or other depicted person and want your information removed, please use the appropriate channel below.

1. Copyright (DMCA) notices

If you are a copyright owner or an authorized agent and believe material referenced on FapStarsDB infringes a work you own, send a notice under the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(3) to our designated agent.

Designated DMCA Agent:
Email: dmca@fapstarsdb.com

A valid notice must include:

We review valid notices and act on them, typically within 5 business days. Knowingly false notices may result in liability for damages under 17 U.S.C. § 512(f).

2. Performer / depicted-person removal

If you are a performer, model, or other person depicted on a page indexed by FapStarsDB and want your information taken down, you do not need a copyright claim. Send a request to removals@fapstarsdb.com.

To process the request quickly, please include:

We review requests within 5 business days and confirm by reply email when the change is live. Removal is permanent: once profile data is deleted, the slug is added to a do-not-reindex list so the page does not reappear if our scrapers find the same name on a public source later.

3. Other content concerns

For everything else (factual errors, wrong scene attribution, defamation, doxxing concerns, minors mistakenly indexed, anything urgent involving safety), email compliance@fapstarsdb.com. We treat reports about possible age, consent, or safety issues as priority and respond within 24 hours.

This page does not constitute legal advice. Counternotices, repeat-infringer policy, and other safe-harbor procedures follow 17 U.S.C. § 512.