Copyright and DMCA Policy

Effective date: July 12, 2026.

This page explains how AniJett receives and reviews copyright complaints. It is not a legal determination that AniJett qualifies for any particular statutory safe harbor. Eligibility and obligations depend on the facts and applicable law.

What AniJett does

AniJett indexes anime metadata, artwork, episode information, schedules, recommendations, and links supplied by third-party services. AniJett is designed to direct users toward authorized destinations and official embeds where available. AniJett does not knowingly host or upload video files, audio files, or subtitle files on its own web servers.

If the alleged infringement is on a third-party server, contact that host or service as well. AniJett can review the reference or link shown through AniJett, but it cannot delete a file from infrastructure it does not control.

Designated copyright contact

Send copyright notices to:

[email protected]

Please use this address for copyright notices and counter-notices only.

Required information for a notice

A notice should include the information required by applicable law, including 17 U.S.C. section 512(c)(3) where the DMCA applies:

  1. A physical or electronic signature of the copyright owner or authorized agent.
  2. Identification of the copyrighted work claimed to be infringed.
  3. The specific AniJett URL or reference that should be reviewed. If the issue concerns an external destination, include that destination URL too.
  4. Your name, address, telephone number, and email address.
  5. A good-faith statement that the disputed use is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent, or the law.
  6. A statement, under penalty of perjury, that the information is accurate and that you are authorized to act for the owner.

False or materially incomplete notices may be rejected. Knowingly sending a material misrepresentation can create liability under applicable law.

How we review notices

We may acknowledge, verify, and route notices through automated and human review. If a notice appears valid and identifies a reference controlled by AniJett, we may remove or restrict that reference, disable an embed, limit access, or take another appropriate action. A temporary restriction may happen while a report is reviewed.

We may request clarification when a notice does not identify a specific AniJett reference or when the reported material is hosted by a third party. We keep records needed to process the report, protect the service, and demonstrate how it was handled.

Counter-notices

If an AniJett reference is removed or restricted and you believe that action was mistaken, send a counter-notice to the same email address. It should identify the material, include your contact details, include your signature, explain why the restriction was mistaken, include the required good-faith and penalty-of-perjury statements, and include the required consent to the jurisdiction described by applicable law.

When the applicable statutory requirements are met, we may forward a counter-notice to the reporting party. We may restore a reference if the law requires or permits restoration and we do not receive timely notice of a court action, subject to the facts and applicable requirements.

Repeat reports and abuse

Where applicable, AniJett may maintain a repeat-infringer process and may restrict accounts, destinations, or references associated with repeated valid reports. We may also reject abusive, fraudulent, or clearly bad-faith submissions.

The operator should have qualified counsel review this policy, confirm the designated contact, and confirm the required notice workflow before relying on it in any jurisdiction.