Copyright, DMCA, takedown, and rights review policy
Blogclue respects copyright owners, trademark holders, product developers, authors, marketplace sellers, and digital creators. This page explains how to request review, correction, restriction, or removal of content, links, images, file references, or product information on Blogclue.com.
Include the exact Blogclue URL and the exact material you want reviewed.
Valid requests are reviewed carefully, but submission does not guarantee automatic removal.
False, abusive, incomplete, or unrelated claims may be rejected.
Rights requests
Copyright, DMCA, trademark, product ownership, correction, and unsafe-link reports can be submitted here.
Required details
Requests need contact details, issue URL, material description, ownership proof, statements, and signature.
Review process
Blogclue may remove content, disable links, correct information, request details, or reject invalid reports.
Ad and trust safety
Confirmed copyright concerns may be restricted to protect users, rights owners, advertisers, and the site.
1. Purpose of This Policy
Blogclue publishes content about WordPress themes, WordPress plugins, WooCommerce extensions, PHP scripts, SaaS templates, website templates, digital tools, changelog summaries, demo links, documentation links, support links, and other digital resources.
Some Blogclue pages may include third-party product names, screenshots, descriptions, external links, download buttons, marketplace links, demo links, documentation links, or file references for informational and resource purposes.
This policy exists so rights owners and authorized representatives can request review for copyright concerns, trademark concerns, unauthorized content claims, product ownership issues, file or download link removal requests, outdated or incorrect product information, misuse of product names or images, and broken, misleading, or harmful external links.
2. Copyright Contact
For copyright, DMCA, takedown, trademark, removal, product correction, or rights-related requests, use the dedicated form on this page or contact Blogclue by email.
- Email: contact@blogclue.com
- Website: https://blogclue.com/
- Policy page: https://blogclue.com/copyright-dmca-takedown-policy/
The U.S. Copyright Office explains that online service providers seeking DMCA safe-harbor protection must designate a DMCA agent, publish the agent’s contact information publicly, and register that agent with the Copyright Office. This page is not legal advice.
3. Before Sending a Request
Before submitting a takedown or rights request, please make sure that:
- You are the copyright owner, trademark owner, product owner, or authorized to act on behalf of the owner.
- You have identified the exact Blogclue URL where the issue appears.
- You have identified the exact content, link, image, file reference, button, or product information you want reviewed.
- Your claim is accurate and made in good faith.
- You understand that false or misleading claims may have legal consequences.
If your concern is only about outdated product information, wrong version details, broken links, or incorrect documentation links, please mention that clearly. Blogclue may be able to correct or update the page without removing the full content.
4. What to Include in a Copyright or DMCA Request
To help Blogclue review your request properly, include complete and accurate details.
- Your full legal name and company or organization name, if applicable.
- Your email address and official website, if applicable.
- Your role, such as copyright owner, authorized representative, product developer, marketplace seller, or trademark owner.
- Proof of ownership or authorization to submit the request.
- Identification of the copyrighted work, protected material, product, file, image, brand, or trademark.
- The exact Blogclue URL where the content, link, file reference, or product information appears.
- The exact text, image, link, file reference, button, product name, screenshot, or section you want reviewed.
- The requested action, such as remove content, disable link, update information, replace with official source, or remove image/screenshot.
- A good-faith statement, an accuracy and authority statement, and your electronic signature.
These items follow the general DMCA notice structure described in 17 U.S.C. Section 512, including an authorized signature, identification of the work, identification of the material to be removed or disabled, contact information, a good-faith statement, and an accuracy/authority statement.
5. Copyright Removal / DMCA Request Form
Use this dedicated form for copyright removal, DMCA takedown, trademark or brand concerns, product information corrections, broken or unsafe link reports, and other rights-related requests.
File uploads are optional and limited to common document or image types. Submitting a request does not guarantee automatic removal, but valid requests will be reviewed carefully.
6. How Blogclue Reviews Requests
After receiving a valid request, Blogclue may:
- Review the reported URL and the reported content, image, file reference, button, or link.
- Verify ownership or authorization information.
- Compare the request with available official sources.
- Remove or disable access to disputed material.
- Update incorrect or outdated information.
- Replace links with official sources when appropriate.
- Ask for more information if the request is incomplete.
- Reject requests that appear false, abusive, incomplete, or unrelated.
Blogclue tries to respond to valid requests in a reasonable time. Complex requests may take longer if ownership, multiple URLs, or third-party sources need review.
7. Incomplete or Invalid Requests
Blogclue may not be able to process requests that do not include enough information.
- No exact Blogclue URL is provided.
- The exact material in question is not identified.
- Proof of ownership or authorization is missing.
- Contact information is missing.
- The request contains false or misleading information.
- The request is submitted by someone who is not authorized.
- The request asks for removal without explaining the legal or rights issue.
- The request is abusive, spammy, threatening, or unrelated.
If your request is incomplete, Blogclue may ask you to provide more details.
8. Trademark and Brand Concerns
If your concern is related to a trademark, logo, brand name, product name, marketplace name, or company name, include the trademark or brand name, registration details if available, the exact Blogclue URL, the exact use you believe is improper, your relationship to the trademark owner, and the action you want Blogclue to take.
Blogclue may mention third-party product names, brand names, logos, screenshots, and marketplace names for identification, review, comparison, and informational purposes. Valid trademark concerns will be reviewed.
9. Product Information Correction Requests
If your request is about incorrect product details rather than copyright infringement, clearly mention that it is a correction request and include an official source link when possible.
- Wrong latest version or update date.
- Broken demo, documentation, support, or download links.
- Incorrect compatibility, requirement, author, developer, or changelog information.
- Incorrect product status or official source details.
10. Counter-Notification
If content, links, or material on Blogclue are removed or disabled because of a takedown request, the affected party may submit a counter-notification if they believe the material was removed because of mistake or misidentification.
A counter-notification should include your physical or electronic signature, identification of the removed or disabled material, the previous location of the material, a statement under penalty of perjury that the removal was due to mistake or misidentification, your name and contact details, and the required jurisdiction and service-of-process statements.
The U.S. Copyright Office describes counter-notice elements and notes that material may be reposted between 10 and 14 business days after receipt of a counter-notice unless the rightsholder files a copyright action first.
11. Repeat Infringer Policy
Blogclue may restrict, remove, block, or terminate access for users, contributors, or external parties who repeatedly submit or share infringing material, abusive links, false information, harmful resources, or rights-violating content.
The U.S. Copyright Office explains that online service providers seeking safe-harbor protection must adopt and reasonably implement a policy for repeat infringers.
12. False or Misleading Claims
Do not submit false, misleading, abusive, or bad-faith takedown requests. By submitting a request, you confirm that the information is accurate and that you are the rights owner or authorized to act on behalf of the rights owner.
False or abusive claims may result in rejection of your request and may have legal consequences.
13. No Guarantee of Removal
Submitting a request does not guarantee automatic removal of content. Blogclue may remove, update, restrict, or keep content depending on the nature of the request, available evidence, applicable law, fair use considerations, public information, product identification needs, and other relevant factors.
Blogclue may also remove or restrict material voluntarily when it is appropriate, even if a formal DMCA notice is incomplete.
14. Advertising and Copyright Compliance
Blogclue aims to keep its content suitable for users, advertisers, and search engines. Google Publisher Policies state that Google does not allow content that infringes copyright and that it responds to DMCA-compliant infringement notices. Google AdSense guidance also says ads should not appear alongside copyrighted material or links to such material when the publisher does not have authorization.
If a copyright issue is confirmed, Blogclue may remove or restrict content to protect users, rights owners, advertisers, and the website.