DMCA Policy

What AniJett Is

AniJett is a search and discovery tool for anime and manga. We pull metadata — titles, descriptions, episode lists, cover art, and airing schedules — from public APIs like Jikan, AniList, and similar services. We don't host, upload, or store any video or media files on our servers. If you can watch something through AniJett, that content lives on a third-party server that we don't own or control.

Under the DMCA (17 U.S.C. § 512), we operate as an information location tool (Section 512(d)). We take copyright seriously and will act on valid takedown requests quickly.

DMCA Agent

Send takedown notices here and only here:

dmca@anijett.com

Notices sent to other addresses won't be processed.

What Your Notice Needs

For us to act on your request, your DMCA notice needs to include all of the following (per 17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(3)):

  1. Your signature (physical or electronic).
  2. Which copyrighted work you're claiming is infringed.
  3. The specific URLs on AniJett where the infringing material appears.
  4. Your contact info — name, address, phone, email.
  5. A statement that you genuinely believe the use isn't authorized by the copyright holder.
  6. A statement, under penalty of perjury, that everything in your notice is accurate and you're authorized to act for the copyright owner.

Heads up: under 17 U.S.C. § 512(f), knowingly sending a false takedown notice can make you liable for damages. Don't abuse the process.

What Happens Next

We use automated systems to process incoming DMCA notices. Once we receive a valid notice:

  • The content gets blocked from our service, usually within minutes.
  • We keep a log of every notice and every action we take.
  • Sources that get flagged repeatedly get permanently blocked.

Repeat Infringers

We have a repeat infringer policy per 17 U.S.C. § 512(i). If a third-party source keeps getting flagged in valid DMCA notices, we permanently cut it off from our service. No warnings, no second chances after the pattern is clear.

Counter-Notices

Think something got taken down by mistake? You can file a counter-notice (17 U.S.C. § 512(g)(3)). It needs to include:

  1. Your signature.
  2. What was removed and where it was.
  3. A statement under penalty of perjury that it was removed by mistake.
  4. Your name, address, phone number, and consent to jurisdiction of the relevant federal court.

We'll forward your counter-notice to whoever filed the original complaint. If they don't take legal action within 10–14 business days, the content gets restored.

Third-Party Content

We're not liable for content that lives on servers we don't control. If your issue is with the actual media files, you should also contact the hosting provider directly — we can only remove references from our search index.

Last updated April 12, 2026.