Nudogram is one of those sites that makes money off your work without your permission. If your content has ended up there, you are not alone and you are not stuck. There are real steps you can take to get it removed.
This guide gives you everything you need to take action, from the exact email to contact to how to deal with the Cloudflare protection that hides their real hosting provider.
What Is Nudogram and Why Your Content Ends Up There
Nudogram is a leak site that hosts stolen content from platforms like OnlyFans, Fansly, and other creator sites. It has been around since 2017 and continues to operate, which means it is well established and not disappearing anytime soon.
Like most leak sites, Nudogram pages can rank on Google. When potential subscribers search your name, they might find your stolen content for free instead of your actual page. Every view on Nudogram is a potential subscriber you lose.
The tricky part with Nudogram is that it sits behind Cloudflare, a service that hides the real hosting provider. This makes DIY takedowns a bit more complicated than usual, but not impossible.
The Fast Way: Let Leakless Handle It
Nudogram is one of the trickier sites to deal with on your own because of the Cloudflare layer. If you do not want to navigate multiple escalation paths, Leakless handles Nudogram takedowns automatically.
We monitor over 50 million websites around the clock, including Nudogram, and file takedowns the moment your content appears. We already know the right contacts, the right format, and the fastest escalation paths for this specific site.
You can start with a free 3-day trial to see results before committing. But if you prefer handling it yourself, here is exactly how to do it.
DIY Option 1: Email Nudogram Directly
Your first step is to send a DMCA takedown notice directly to Nudogram. Their contact email is nudogram@gmail.com.
Your DMCA notice should include:
- Your full name and contact information
- The exact URLs on Nudogram where your stolen content appears
- Links to your original content as proof of ownership
- A statement that you own the copyright and the information in your notice is accurate
- Your physical or electronic signature
Keep in mind that this is a Gmail address, not a professional abuse inbox. Response times can be unpredictable. Some creators get results, others hear nothing. If you do not get a response within a week or two, move on to the next option.
DIY Option 2: File a Cloudflare Abuse Report
If Nudogram ignores your email, the next step is Cloudflare. Nudogram uses Cloudflare to protect and hide its real hosting provider, which means a standard WHOIS lookup will not reveal who actually hosts the site.
Cloudflare has an abuse reporting form on their website. When you submit a DMCA report through Cloudflare, they will forward your complaint to the actual hosting provider behind the scenes. This is often the most effective path because it bypasses the site owner entirely and goes straight to the infrastructure level.
Include the same information as your direct DMCA notice: your identity, the infringing URLs, proof of ownership, and your copyright statement. Cloudflare typically processes these within a few business days.
DIY Option 3: Escalate to the Domain Registrar
If both Nudogram and the Cloudflare route fail, you can escalate to the domain registrar. Nudogram is registered through Internet Domain Service BS Corp, a registrar based in the Bahamas. Their abuse contact email is abuse@internet.bs.
Send your DMCA takedown notice to their abuse email with all the same details. Registrars have the power to suspend a domain entirely if a site repeatedly ignores copyright violations. However, because this registrar is offshore, response times can be slower than what you would expect from a US-based provider.
This is a last resort option. Registrar takedowns take longer and are less common, but they remain a legitimate tool in your arsenal.
DIY Option 4: Remove It From Google Search
Even if the content stays on Nudogram, you can make it much harder to find by removing it from Google search results. Most people discover leaked content through search engines, so delisting cuts off the main source of traffic.
Google has a dedicated DMCA request form. Submit the Nudogram URLs along with proof that you own the content. Google typically processes these requests within one to two weeks.
This does not delete the content from Nudogram itself, but it stops the page from appearing when someone searches your name. For many creators, this is the single most impactful step you can take.
What to Expect: Realistic Timelines
Here is what you can realistically expect from each approach:
- Direct email to Nudogram: Unpredictable. Could be days, could be never.
- Cloudflare abuse report: A few business days to forward your complaint to the host.
- Registrar escalation: Weeks to months, given the offshore registrar.
- Google delisting: One to two weeks.
Nudogram has been operating since 2017 and shows no signs of shutting down. Even after a successful takedown, your content can get re-uploaded. This is why ongoing monitoring is so important. Whether you check manually or use a service like Leakless, staying on top of new leaks is the only way to keep your content protected long term.
Take Action Now
Your content is your livelihood and you have every right to protect it. Nudogram makes takedowns harder than most sites because of the Cloudflare protection and offshore registrar, but that does not mean you are powerless.
Start with the direct email, escalate through Cloudflare and the registrar if needed, and always delist from Google. Or skip the hassle entirely and let Leakless handle it from day one. The important thing is to act fast. The longer leaked content stays up, the more damage it does to your income.
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