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DMCA / Copyright Takedown Procedure

If you believe content published on OnlinePokiesAustralia.it.com infringes your copyright, follow the procedure below. We operate under Australian copyright law (Copyright Act 1968), but we honour DMCA-equivalent notices from international rightsholders.

Required elements of a takedown notice

Your notice must include:

  1. Your name, postal address, telephone number and email.
  2. An electronic or physical signature of the copyright owner or an authorised agent.
  3. A description of the copyrighted work you claim is infringed (e.g. photograph, text excerpt, logo).
  4. The exact URL(s) on our site where the allegedly infringing material is located.
  5. A statement that you have a good-faith belief the use is not authorised by the copyright owner, its agent, or the law.
  6. A statement, made under penalty of perjury, that the information in the notice is accurate and you are the copyright owner or authorised to act on behalf of the owner.

Where to send

Send takedown notices by email to:

[email protected]
Subject line: “DMCA Takedown — [URL]”

Postal notices are accepted but processed more slowly. Email correspondence is preferred.

Our response timeline

  • Within 2 business days: We acknowledge receipt of your notice.
  • Within 5 business days: We review the claim and either remove the content, restrict access pending further review, or respond with the reason the notice is insufficient.
  • Within 10 business days: Final resolution communicated, including counter-notice process if applicable.

Counter-notice

If content you posted has been removed and you believe the removal was mistaken or the result of misidentification, you may submit a counter-notice. A counter-notice must include:

  1. Your name, address, telephone number and email.
  2. Identification of the material removed and the URL where it appeared.
  3. A statement, under penalty of perjury, that you have a good-faith belief the removal was in error.
  4. A statement that you consent to the jurisdiction of the Federal Court of Australia for disputes arising from the content.
  5. Your physical or electronic signature.

False claims

Submitting a takedown notice or counter-notice that contains materially false information may expose you to liability for damages, including costs and legal fees. Only submit a notice if you are authorised to act for the copyright owner and have a good-faith belief the use is infringing.

Repeat infringers

We do not allow user-submitted content on this site. If we identify a pattern of infringement in syndicated or licensed content feeds, we terminate the arrangement with the source.