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DMCA / Copyright Policy

DMCA / Copyright Policy

CorrectOrNot.com respects intellectual property rights and expects the same from everyone who uses the site. We take copyright concerns seriously. Not dramatically. Seriously.

This page explains how to submit a DMCA notice, what information we need, how we handle claims, and what to do if you believe content was removed by mistake. Some steps are short. Some are more detailed. That’s because legal processes need clarity.

Important: This is an informational policy page. It is not legal advice. If you need legal guidance, consult an attorney. For general site terms, you can review our Terms & Conditions.


1) Copyright Ownership & Our Content

Unless otherwise stated, the articles, page structure, and original writing published on CorrectOrNot.com are protected by copyright. You may share short excerpts with attribution, but you may not republish full articles, scrape the site at scale, or reproduce our content as your own without permission.

We also respect the copyrights of others. If you believe any material on our site infringes your rights, please follow the process below so we can review and address the issue promptly.

2) How to Submit a DMCA Takedown Notice

If you are a copyright owner (or authorized to act on behalf of one) and believe that content on this site infringes your copyrighted work, you may submit a DMCA takedown request.

To help us process your request quickly, please include all of the following information in your notice:

  1. Your full name (or the name of the copyright owner you represent)
  2. Your email address and a way to contact you
  3. Identification of the copyrighted work you claim has been infringed (provide a description or a link)
  4. The exact URL(s) on CorrectOrNot.com where the allegedly infringing material appears
  5. A statement that you have a good-faith belief the use is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent, or the law
  6. A statement that the information in your notice is accurate, and under penalty of perjury, that you are the copyright owner or authorized to act on their behalf
  7. Your physical or electronic signature (typing your full legal name is acceptable for an electronic signature)

Practical tip: If your notice is missing key information (especially the URLs), we may not be able to act on it. The more specific you are, the faster this moves.

3) Where to Send a DMCA Notice

Please send DMCA notices to our designated email:

Email: support@correctornot.com


4) What Happens After You Submit

Once we receive a complete notice, we will review it and take appropriate action. This may include removing or disabling access to the material, and notifying the party responsible for the content (if applicable).

We aim to handle DMCA requests promptly. Still, timing depends on the completeness of the submission and the complexity of the claim. Some cases are simple. Some are not.

We may ask follow-up questions. This is not to stall. It’s to ensure accuracy and fairness before action is taken.

5) Counter-Notification (If You Believe a Claim Is Incorrect)

If you believe that your content was removed or disabled by mistake or misidentification, you may submit a counter-notification. Please include the following:

  1. Your full name and contact information
  2. The URL(s) of the material that was removed (or a description if it’s no longer accessible)
  3. A statement under penalty of perjury that you have a good-faith belief the material was removed due to mistake or misidentification
  4. A statement consenting to the jurisdiction of the appropriate court (as required under DMCA procedures)
  5. Your physical or electronic signature

Send counter-notifications to support@correctornot.com with the subject line: DMCA Counter-Notice.

6) Repeat Infringers

In appropriate circumstances, we may terminate access to users who are repeat infringers. We do not enjoy doing that. But we will protect intellectual property rights.

7) Misuse of the DMCA Process

DMCA claims are legal statements. Submitting false or misleading information may have legal consequences. If you are unsure whether something is actually infringing, take a moment, verify, and consider consulting a professional.


8) Contact

If you have questions about this policy, you can email us at support@correctornot.com. If your request is urgent, include DMCA in the subject line so it can be reviewed faster.