DMCA & Content Attribution
Last updated: 2026-07-07
In plain language: The feed aggregates and excerpts external content with attribution and links back to the original source. If you own content we're linking to and want it removed, here's how to tell us.
1. How the Feed Works
AI for Anything includes a feed that curates and links to external AI learning resources from blogs, YouTube, Twitter, and other sources. For each link, we show:
- The original title (or a version of it)
- A brief excerpt or TLDR (summary)
- An image (either original or proxied)
- A direct link to the original source
- Attribution to the original creator/publication
The goal is to drive traffic back to the original source and help people discover good content. We're not replacing the original — we're pointing to it.
2. Copyright & Attribution
We respect copyright. The excerpts and summaries we show are intended to be fair use:
- We excerpt only a small portion of the original work (summaries, not full articles)
- We always link back to the original source
- We provide clear attribution
- We don't republish the full work
- Our use is transformative (curating for a different audience/purpose)
However, fair use is interpreted case-by-case. If you believe we're infringing on your copyright, you can send us a DMCA notice (see below).
3. Our Original Content
Recipes and articles we create are owned by AI for Anything or the original author. You can:
- Read and share for personal use
- Link to them from your own site
- Reference them in discussions (with attribution)
You cannot:
- Republish our content without permission
- Use it commercially without a license
- Claim it as your own
If you want to use our content, email [email protected] and we can discuss a license.
4. DMCA Takedown Notice
If you own copyrighted content that appears on our platform without permission, you can send us a DMCA notice. To be valid, your notice must include:
Required Information (Per DMCA 17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(3))
- Your name, address, phone number, and email (your contact information)
- Description of the copyrighted work you believe is infringed (e.g., "my blog post titled 'How to Use GPT-4' published on May 15, 2026")
- URL or description of where it appears on our platform (the infringing content)
- Certification that you own the copyright or are authorized to act on behalf of the owner
- Your statement under penalty of perjury that the information you've provided is accurate and that you have a good-faith belief the use is not authorized
- Your physical or electronic signature
How to Send the Notice
Email your DMCA notice to:
[email protected]
Subject: "DMCA Takedown Notice"
What Happens Next
After we receive a valid DMCA notice:
- We'll review the notice
- If valid, we'll remove or disable access to the infringing content
- We'll notify the content's uploader (if applicable)
- We'll keep a record of the notice for legal compliance
5. Counter-Notice
If we've removed your content due to a DMCA notice, and you believe the removal was wrong, you can send us a counter-notice. To be valid, it must include:
Required Information (Per DMCA 17 U.S.C. § 512(g)(3))
- Your name, address, phone number, and email
- Description of the removed content
- Your statement explaining why you believe the removal was mistaken (e.g., you had permission, it's fair use, etc.)
- Your statement under penalty of perjury that you have a good-faith belief the material should not have been removed
- Your physical or electronic signature
- Consent to jurisdiction of the appropriate federal court
How to Send a Counter-Notice
Email to:
[email protected]
Subject: "DMCA Counter-Notice"
What Happens Next
After we receive a valid counter-notice:
- We'll review it
- We'll notify the original DMCA claimant
- If the claimant doesn't pursue legal action within 10 business days, we'll restore the content
- If they sue, we'll comply with the court's judgment
6. Repeat Infringer Policy
We take copyright seriously. Users or accounts that repeatedly infringe on copyrights after receiving notice will have their accounts suspended or terminated.
A "repeat infringer" is someone who:
- Has had multiple DMCA notices issued against their content
- Continues to upload infringing material after being notified
- Has demonstrated a pattern of copyright infringement
Questions About Copyright?
Email us at [email protected]