Adult content creators and sex workers face a specific form of NCII: content created consensually on one platform being stolen and distributed on others without consent and without compensation. The key legal question is not where the content was created but whether you consented to its distribution on the platform where it is currently hosted. The TAKE IT DOWN Act answers that clearly.

How ScanErase works for your situation

  1. Upload your face photo Biometric scan identifies all platforms currently hosting your likeness.
  2. Identify unauthorized redistribution Your dashboard distinguishes platforms where your content is authorized from platforms where it is not.
  3. Authorize removal from unauthorized platforms You choose which platforms receive removal notices.
  4. Send legal notices with 48-hour deadlines Formal 223a notices sent to all unauthorized hosting platforms.
  5. Document compliance and re-upload activity Your Evidence Locker tracks all removals and any re-upload detection.

Frequently asked questions

My images were created consensually. Does the law still apply to redistribution?

Yes. The TAKE IT DOWN Act's standard is whether you consented to distribution on the specific platform hosting the content now. If you posted on Platform A and someone reposted to Platform B without your permission, Platform B is in violation when you send a notice.

What about watermarked content that was clearly stolen?

Watermarks help establish origin and unauthorized redistribution. Include your watermarked source URL in the Identity Vault documentation when you authorize your removal notices.