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Q&A

1. WHERE YOUR PICTURES CAN STILL BE SAVED OR FOUND​

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Adult content spreads easily because platforms and search engines copy, cache, or archive data. Common places include:

 

A. The Original Platform (e.g., OnlyFans)

Even after you delete your content, the platform may still:

  • store backups,

  • keep internal logs,

  • retain data for legal reasons.

 

B. Third-Party Aggregator Sites

Examples: “FansMetrics”, “FanReviews”, “OnlyFinder”, “Leaks” websites.
These platforms often:

  • scrape profiles,

  • repost thumbnails or pictures,

  • display analytics.

 

C. Leak Sites & Forums

Your content may be:

  • downloaded by subscribers,

  • uploaded to leak forums,

  • traded on Discord/Telegram.

 

D. Search Engines

Your images can stay in:

  • Google Images cache

  • Bing cache

  • Yandex index

 

Even after deletion, cached versions may remain visible.

 

E. The Internet Archive (Wayback Machine)

The Wayback Machine sometimes captures:

  • profile pages,

  • thumbnails,

  • full pages (depending on settings).

 

These snapshots may persist even if the page is deleted.

 

F. Private Backups

People may have saved your content offline:

  • phone storage

  • cloud drives

  • local downloads

 

This is the one area you cannot control, but these copies cannot be made public without legal consequences.

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2. WHY DELETING CONTENT DOESN’T INSTANTLY REMOVE IT

 

Even after deleting content, you may still see it because:

  • Search engines keep cached versions.

  • Third-party sites scrape content automatically.

  • Archive services capture snapshots.

  • Visitors download and repost content.

 

This is frustrating, but there are formal ways to request removal.

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3. STEP-BY-STEP: HOW TO DELETE OR REMOVE YOUR ADULT PICTURES FROM THE INTERNET

 

Below is the most complete and effective process you can follow.

 

STEP 1: Delete Content on the Original Platform

Example for OnlyFans (or similar):

  1. Log in

  2. Go to your posts and delete all photos/videos

  3. Disable auto-renew and subscriptions

  4. Delete your profile

  5. Contact their support and request:
    “Permanent deletion of all personal data and media under GDPR/CCPA privacy laws.”

 

Platforms are required to comply and remove all user-uploaded media.

 

STEP 2: Request Removal From Search Engines

Search engines allow removal of:

  • nude images,

  • intimate content,

  • non-consensual images,

  • old cached pages.

 

Google Removal:

Go to: Google → Remove outdated content / Remove personal images

You can request removal for:

  • images that no longer exist on the site

  • sensitive personal images (nudity)

  • pages showing scraped content

You must submit:

  • URL of the image or page

  • Screenshot (optional)

  • Explanation (e.g., “Non-consensual reposting of adult content I previously removed.”)

 

Bing/Yahoo, DuckDuckGo:

They have similar “privacy and removal request” forms.

 

STEP 3: Send DMCA Takedown Requests

A DMCA request works internationally for copyrighted material — and you own the copyright to pictures of yourself, unless a contract states otherwise.

 

You can send DMCA takedowns to:

  • hosting providers

  • domain registrars

  • search engines

  • platforms that reposted your content

 

Use a template such as:

“I am the copyright owner of the attached image(s). This content has been reposted without permission. Please remove it in accordance with the DMCA.”

Most leak sites comply because they do not want to be shut down.

 

STEP 4: Contact Third-Party Sites Individually

For sites like:

  • FansMetrics

  • OnlyFinder

  • FansReviews

  • Leak sites

 

Actions you can take:

  1. Look for “Report”, “DMCA”, “Privacy Request”, or “Contact” pages

  2. Provide URLs and screenshots

  3. Request removal citing:
    GDPR Right to Erasure (if you’re in the EU)
    DMCA copyright violation

 

Many analytic sites (Metrics/Finder) will remove data quickly when requested.

 

STEP 5: Request Removal From the Wayback Machine (Internet Archive)

You can request your archived pages be removed.

 

How:

Email: info@archive.org
Include:

  • URL of the Wayback snapshot

  • Proof it is your content

  • Statement: “This page contains my personal images and I request removal under privacy rights.”

They regularly remove sensitive personal content.

 

STEP 6: Get Professional Help (Optional)

 

If this is too overwhelming, we can handle the full removal process for you. Quickly, confidentially, and effectively.​​​​​​​​

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