Removal guide

Remove Leaked Content From Fappening Book.

fappeningbook.com

If your content has turned up on Fappening Book, take a breath before you start clicking around. Leak sites are built to make creators feel exposed and rushed, but removal is a process you can tackle cleanly.

6.7M.

infringements for this domain

Source: Google Transparency Report, as of May 2026

Known mirrors

bg.fappeningbook.comca.fappeningbook.comco.fappeningbook.comcz.fappeningbook.comde.fappeningbook.comdk.fappeningbook.comes.fappeningbook.comfi.fappeningbook.com+15 more

Why this needs more than one takedown request

Fappening Book is a leak aggregator, which means pages can be copied, reposted, indexed, and mirrored rather than sitting in one neat location. There are 6,680,940 Google URLs flagged for this site and 23 known mirrors, so the issue is usually not just one page.

That scale matters because leaked pages can show up in search where potential fans are looking for you. If a free leak outranks your paid page, people may find the stolen version instead of subscribing - and that means lost subscribers, lost income, and more unwanted sharing.

What to gather before you send a notice

Before contacting the site, collect the details that make the request specific and easy to process. Don’t rely on screenshots alone if the live page is still available.

Useful items to gather:

  • The exact Fappening Book page URLs where your content appears
  • Any image, gallery, post, or file URLs shown on those pages
  • Screenshots for your own records
  • The original place your content was published, such as your paid creator page or other official account
  • A short description of what was copied, without adding explicit detail
  • Any mirror copies you already know about
  • Google search result URLs that point to the leaked pages

Keep everything organized in one document or folder. The cleaner the evidence, the easier it is to remove the hosted pages and delist the search results tied to them.

Where to send the removal request

The useful contact for this site is the site’s own DMCA / abuse email: lopapopator@gmail.com.

A proper notice should clearly identify your content, point to the infringing URLs, state that you are the rights holder or authorized to act for the rights holder, and include enough contact information for the request to be processed. It should also ask for the copied material to be removed from the site and any related copies under the same control.

Avoid sending a vague message like “remove everything about me.” The request needs to identify the actual pages and files. At the same time, don’t overshare personal information beyond what the channel reasonably needs.

Don’t stop at the page removal

Removing the page is only part of the job. Search results can continue to expose the URL even after you have started the takedown process, and mirror copies can keep the same leak circulating elsewhere.

For a complete cleanup, removal and Google delisting should be handled together. That means:

  • Sending the DMCA request for the live pages
  • Covering the known mirror copies as part of the same cleanup
  • Submitting the infringing search results for Google delisting
  • Rechecking for reposts after the first wave is handled

This is where the work gets tiring for creators. Not because the process is complicated in theory, but because the volume and recurrence can be exhausting when you’re doing it alone.

When it makes sense to get help

If there is only one URL, you may be able to send the notice yourself. But with an aggregator like this, the practical problem is tracking every copy, every search result, and every mirror without turning your week into a leak-monitoring job.

Leakless handles the removal work for adult creators: the site notices, the mirror coverage, and the Google delisting that helps stop leaked pages from being found through search. If your content is already spreading beyond one page, getting it handled professionally can save a lot of time and stress.

Questions.

Can I remove my content myself?

Yes, if you have the exact URLs and you’re comfortable preparing a proper DMCA notice. The hard part is usually not the first request — it’s keeping track of reposts, mirrors, and Google results so the leak does not keep resurfacing.

Will Google remove the leaked results too?

Google delisting is a normal part of a complete takedown. Once the infringing URLs are documented, the search results pointing to those pages can be submitted for removal so people are less likely to find the leaked content through search.

Do mirrors need separate attention?

Yes. Mirror copies should be treated as part of the same removal job, not as an afterthought. Fappening Book has 23 known mirrors, so covering those copies helps prevent the same content from staying visible under another version of the site.

What if the leak comes back later?

Reposts are common on aggregator-style sites. Keep records of what was removed and watch for new URLs using the same content. Leakless can handle recurring removals so you are not repeatedly starting over from scratch.

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