What's the Difference Between Delist and Removal?.

1 min de lecture·DMCA & Takedowns

When we take action against leaked content, you might see two different outcomes: delist or removal. Here's what each means.

Removal

Removal means the content has been completely deleted from the website. The file no longer exists on their servers, and the URL returns an error or "not found" page. This is the ideal outcome.

Delist

Delisting means the content has been removed from search engine results (like Google). The content may still exist on the website, but people can't find it by searching. This significantly reduces exposure since most people discover leaked content through search engines.

Why Both Matter

We always aim for full removal, but delisting is still valuable:

  • It's often faster than waiting for site removal
  • It stops new people from discovering the content
  • Some stubborn sites ignore removal requests but search engines always comply

Our Approach

Leakless pursues both simultaneously. We send DMCA notices to the hosting site for removal while also requesting delisting from major search engines. This two-pronged approach ensures maximum protection for your content.

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Continue ta lecture

What is a DMCA Notice?

Learn what a DMCA notice is and how it helps protect your content.

Why Some Takedowns Take Longer

Understand why removal times vary and what affects how quickly content gets taken down.

What Happens After We Send a DMCA Notice?

Learn what to expect after we send a takedown request on your behalf.

How Long Does a Takedown Take?

Typical timeframes for content removal across different platforms.