What to do if your nudes are leaked: a step-by-step guide
- PiracyPrivacy
Finding out your private photos are online without your consent is awful. Whether you are a creator whose paywalled content has been pirated, or someone whose intimate images ended up online through someone else’s actions, you have rights, and you have options. This guide walks through exactly what to do, in order, to get the content removed and reclaim control.
First, take a breath
Before you do anything else, two ground rules.
GROUND RULE 1
Do not delete anything
Not your messages, not your accounts, not the leaked posts themselves. Your evidence base matters in every step that follows. If the leaker is someone you know, every conversation you have with them is potential proof of who did it.
GROUND RULE 2
Do not panic-engage
If you are being blackmailed for money or more content, do not pay and do not negotiate. Sextortion blackmailers almost always come back for more once you pay. Save the messages, block the contact on private channels, and move into action mode on the steps below.
Document everything
You will need a record of every leaked instance you can find. Open a private folder on your device and start collecting:
- Screenshots of every post, page, channel, or message showing your content. Capture the URL bar, timestamp, and username when possible.
- URLs in plain text, copied into a document. Screenshots can degrade. A list of URLs cannot.
- Date and time you found each instance.
- Any messages from the leaker, including threats, demands, or admissions.
This evidence is what you will hand off to platforms, takedown services, or law enforcement. It also protects you if you later need to prove you tried to act in good faith.
Map the spread
Before you start reporting, get a picture of how far it has gone. Search for:
- Your stage name, real name, and any aliases on Google
- Reverse image search using one of your photos (Google Images, TinEye)
- Your name on X, Reddit, Telegram, and any forum where leaks tend to live
- Adult tube sites if applicable
Add every find to your evidence folder. The reason this matters: takedowns work best in waves. Hitting all the major copies at once is more effective than chasing one at a time, because pirates often share content across sites and a slow rollout gives them time to repost elsewhere.
File takedowns where the content lives
For every platform hosting your content, there are two routes. The platform’s own report flow. Most major sites (Instagram, X, Reddit, TikTok, Telegram) have built-in reporting for non-consensual intimate imagery (NCII) and copyright violations. These are usually the fastest first step.
A formal DMCA takedown notice.
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act gives you a legal path to demand removal from any site, host, or search engine. A DMCA notice is a formal letter that identifies the content, your ownership, and the infringing copy, and it triggers a legal obligation for the platform to act. This is the heavier route, and it is the one that actually moves stubborn sites.
If you are doing this yourself, expect a learning curve. If you want help, our DMCA Takedown Service handles the entire process under our name as your appointed agent, which means your personal information stays off every notice.
Get the content out of Google
Even after the original post is gone, Google can keep showing it in search results for days or weeks. That keeps the content discoverable to anyone searching your name.
The fix is a separate request: a DMCA takedown to Google, which deindexes the URL from search results. As a Trusted Google Partner, we file these requests for our members directly through Google’s priority channel. You can also submit them yourself through Google’s removal tools, but be aware that filing in your own name puts your personal details on Google’s record.
More on this in our breakdown of how the Google Removal Service works.
Decide what kind of help you want
This is where the right next step depends on who you are. If you are a content creator whose paid content has been pirated, this is exactly what a managed takedown service is built for. You get unlimited DMCA filings, ongoing monitoring for reuploads, and a team that escalates the stubborn cases. A free scan shows you what is currently out there, so you can see the scale before deciding anything.
If you are not a creator and your private photos were leaked outside of any subscription platform, you are dealing with image-based abuse. Non-profit organizations like the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative (CCRI) run support helplines and provide free guidance specifically for this situation. They also know the legal landscape in your country, which a takedown service does not advise on. Either way: do not try to handle this entirely alone. The volume of leaks can grow faster than one person can keep up with, and the emotional weight of clicking through copy after copy of your own content is heavy.
Report the crime if there was one
In many countries, distributing intimate images without consent is a criminal offense. So is sextortion. If you know who leaked your content, or if you are being blackmailed, consider filing a report with your local police or cybercrime unit. In the US, the FBI’s IC3 (Internet Crime Complaint Center) accepts online reports of sextortion. In the UK, the Revenge Porn Helpline can guide you on next legal steps. Other countries have similar routes.
Reporting does not undo the leak, but it puts the legal weight where it belongs: on the person who broke the law, not on you.
Protect yourself going forward
Once the immediate crisis is under control, two things help reduce the chance of it happening again.
For creators: continuous monitoring is the actual defense. One-off takedowns get the current leaks down, but pirates re-upload to new tube sites and Telegram channels regularly. A service that scans for new leaks and acts on them automatically is the difference between “this happened once” and “this keeps happening.”
For everyone: tighten what you share and with whom. If intimate images exist on any device, treat that device with extra care. Avoid backing them up to cloud services that share access by default. If a relationship ends, change passwords on any shared accounts. None of this means it was your fault if a leak happened, only that some hygiene reduces the risk of a future one.
Take care of yourself
Having your nudes leaked is traumatic. It is not your fault, regardless of how the content was created or who you shared it with. Anyone telling you otherwise is wrong.
If you are struggling, talk to a therapist who has experience with online abuse or image-based violations, or reach out to a support helpline. The practical steps in this guide deal with the content. The emotional weight is something you do not have to carry alone either.
Frequently Asked Questions
Leaked Nudes
You can still take everything down. Copyright protection does not require you to identify the leaker. As long as you can prove you are the person in the photos and the original creator, you can file DMCA takedowns to every site hosting them. Identifying the leaker is a separate process, usually one that requires law enforcement or a legal subpoena to platforms.
Yes. Copyright lasts for your lifetime plus 70 years in most countries. Old leaks are just as actionable as new ones. The harder part is finding all the places they have spread to over the years, which is where monitoring tools and manual searches come in.
A single takedown removes a specific copy from a specific platform. It does not stop someone from re-uploading the same content elsewhere. That is why monitoring matters. The goal is not just one removal, it is ongoing enforcement until pirates give up on your content.
In many jurisdictions, yes. Non-consensual sharing of intimate images is criminalized in most US states, across the EU, the UK, Australia, and a growing list of other countries. The specifics depend on where you live and where the leaker lives, so for legal advice talk to a lawyer or a victim support organization familiar with cyber crime in your region.
Generally no, especially not before you have documented everything and started takedowns. Confrontation can lead to deletion of evidence on their side, retaliation through more leaks, or escalation in sextortion cases. Get the content offline first, then decide on the human conversation separately.