Removal guide

Remove Leaked Content From Recurbate.

recu.me

Seeing your paid content on Recurbate can feel invasive and exhausting, especially when it appears in search results where anyone can find it. You should not have to chase stolen uploads while also trying to run your creator business.

Recurbate is a tube site, and the scale is real: 427863 Google URLs have been flagged for Recurbate, with 2 known mirrors connected to it. That volume matters because leaked pages can outrank your own paid page, sending people to free copies instead of to your subscriptions.

427.9K.

infringements for this domain

Source: Google Transparency Report, as of May 2026

Known mirrors

rec-ur-bate.comes.recu.me

What to do first

Start by saving evidence before you submit anything. Don’t spend hours clicking around or engaging with the site more than you need to. The goal is to collect enough detail for a clean removal request.

Gather:

  • The exact Recurbate page URLs where your content appears
  • Screenshots showing the page and the content location
  • The original platform URL where your content was posted, if available
  • Any account, post, or clip details that help identify the content
  • Proof that you own the content or are authorized to act for it

Keep everything in one folder. If there are multiple pages, group them clearly so the request does not become messy.

Use the site’s removal form

Recurbate uses its own on-site removal / DMCA form, and that is the right channel for takedown requests. A strong notice is clear, specific, and complete. It should identify the content being removed, list the exact URLs, explain that you own or control the rights, and include enough contact information for the request to be processed.

Avoid sending vague messages like “remove everything about me.” Takedowns work best when every infringing page is identified. If the same content appears across several uploads, include each page rather than assuming one report covers all of them.

Don’t stop at the visible page

Tube-site leaks rarely stay in one place. Copies can show up in search results, cached snippets, reposts, and mirror versions of the same site structure. Mirrors and Google delisting are part of the same job.

That matters because even after the page itself is removed, a search result can still keep the leak visible for people looking for your content. Delisting those URLs helps stop the free version from competing with your paid page and draining potential subscribers.

Why repeated removals are common

The frustrating part is usually not one takedown. It is the volume and recurrence. The same clip or gallery can be reposted under a slightly different page, picked up by a mirror, or appear again after being indexed elsewhere.

That is why creators often feel like they are doing the same removal over and over. The answer is not a louder notice — it is consistent coverage: the original pages, the mirror copies, and the search results that keep surfacing them.

How Leakless can help

Leakless handles this process for adult creators who do not want to spend their time filing reports page by page. We prepare and submit removal requests, include the relevant URLs, handle the Recurbate removal channel, and take care of Google delisting as part of the cleanup.

If you have already found one page, send us what you have. If you have found many, even better — we can organize the removal work so you are not stuck tracking every repost yourself.

Questions.

Can I remove your content myself?

Yes. If there are only one or two pages, you can use the site’s on-site removal / DMCA form and submit the exact URLs with proof that you own the content. The more pages involved, the harder it becomes to keep track of removals, mirrors, and search results manually.

What if the page is removed but Google still shows it?

That is common with indexed leak pages. The page removal and Google delisting should be handled together so the result does not keep appearing in search and sending people toward free copies of your content.

Do I need to contact the person who uploaded it?

No. You can focus on the platform and search results. Contacting uploaders often wastes time and can create more stress. A proper removal request should target the pages where your content is being published.

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