Legal
Takedown & Copyright
Last updated 22 April 2026
If you believe a release on SinguLoom infringes your copyright, uses your likeness without consent, or violates your rights in another way, this page tells you how to get it taken down. We act on good-faith notices quickly — usually within 48 hours.
How to submit a takedown notice
Email takedown@singuloom.com with the subject “Takedown request — [release title]” and include:
- Your full name and contact details (email + a reply-to address).
- A link to the release on SinguLoom that you believe is infringing.
- A description of the work that has been infringed (title, year, your role).
- Evidence you own or control the rights to that work — registration number, commission contract, or equivalent.
- A statement, under penalty of perjury, that the information is accurate and that you are authorised to act on behalf of the rights holder.
- Your signature (typed name is fine for email).
What happens next
- We acknowledge receipt within 24 hours.
- For likely-valid claims, we archive the release immediately — it disappears from the public catalogue while we review.
- We notify the creator and give them 14 days to respond.
- If the creator accepts the claim, the release is deleted from Mux and our systems. The archive is permanent.
- If the creator contests, we forward the dispute to you both. SinguLoom does not act as a court — genuinely disputed cases must go to arbitration or the courts.
Counter-notices
If your release was taken down and you believe the notice was wrong, you can submit a counter-notice to takedown@singuloom.com. Include the original release URL, a statement of good-faith belief that removal was a mistake, consent to jurisdiction, and your contact details. We restore the release after 10 business days unless the original claimant initiates legal proceedings.
Repeat infringers
Accounts subject to more than two valid takedowns are banned. Pending earnings on the affected releases are returned to the rights holders where legally required.
False claims
Knowingly false takedown notices are themselves a legal liability under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (for US claims) and equivalent UK legislation. We keep a record of all notices, and we may share them with affected creators. Think twice before filing.
Not sure which route you need?
- Copyright / music / footage — this page.
- Someone used your face or voice— same address, but mark the subject “Likeness — [release title]”.
- Community standards (hate, harassment, deceptive content) — use the report form, not this one.
This is placeholder policy text — not legal advice. Final copy is pending review by a qualified solicitor before any public launch. Questions in the meantime: /support.