REAL CLIENTS.
REAL RESULTS.
All client identities are anonymized per NDA. All results are verified and documented in our enforcement logs. None of these numbers are estimates.
A top-10 global streaming service was losing an estimated $34M in annual revenue to piracy of its original content catalog. Infringing copies appeared on average within 2.6 hours of a title's premiere — capturing demand during the critical first-week launch window. Internal DMCA filings had a 71% removal rate, with average response times exceeding 6 days.
EzlaScan deployed its full pre-release monitoring suite 96 hours before each premiere, building content fingerprints from promotional assets. On release, automated enforcement swept 340+ platforms simultaneously. Platform-native API integrations replaced manual form submissions. A dedicated re-upload surveillance layer tracked re-encoded copies.
“We went from chasing pirates to running ahead of them. The first protected premiere hit our highest ever opening-week numbers on the platform.”
A group of four independent music labels with a combined 2,200-title catalog was facing widespread distribution piracy across Telegram channels, MP3 download sites, and unlicensed YouTube re-uploads. DSP royalty data showed a 19% gap between expected and actual streams — attributed to audience split with piracy sources. Counter-notice abuse was extending removal timelines to 18–22 days.
EzlaScan enrolled the full 2,200-title catalog into its audio fingerprinting registry within 48 hours. Platform-specific enforcement was deployed across 180+ audio and social media platforms. A dedicated Telegram monitoring channel was established, with bots scanning over 4,000 music-focused Telegram groups daily. Counter-notice litigation support was activated for all disputed removals.
“The Telegram monitoring alone uncovered piracy volumes we had no idea existed. Within six months, our royalty statements told a completely different story.”
A heritage luxury brand with seven-figure annual trademark licensing revenue discovered an operator running 847 counterfeit storefronts across 23 variations of its brand name. Sites were generating estimated annual gross merchandise volume of $12M — shipping cheap replicas globally. Brand equity research showed measurable negative consumer perception correlation with counterfeit exposure in key markets.
EzlaScan's intelligence team mapped the full counterfeit infrastructure: the server cluster, 14 domain registrars, 8 payment processors, and 3 hosting providers supporting the network. A coordinated infrastructure-level takedown was executed simultaneously across all identified nodes — rather than filing individual site takedowns. Payment processor termination was prioritized to cut revenue flow.
“They didn't just take down one site. They collapsed the entire network. Eighteen months of infrastructure building, gone in four days.”
Your content is next. Let us protect it.
Start with a free scan. No commitment, no contract.