If your content has just been leaked, you don't need a lecture. You need it to stop spreading. So let's start with what happens the moment we take your case, and then tell you the truth about the rest, because the truth is the part that actually keeps you safe.

First, we make it unfindable

Before anything else, in the overwhelming majority of our cases, we deindex the content: we get the infringing URLs pulled from search results, from Google and the places people actually use to find things. It's fast, and it works even when the host refuses to cooperate, because search engines comply with the law even when a defiant host does not.

Here's why that matters more than it sounds. Almost no one finds leaked content by typing in a server address; they find it by searching. Content that doesn't show up in search is, for practically everyone, gone. The fire stops spreading the moment people can no longer find the match.

So the first thing you get from us is relief you can rely on: your content made invisible and unfindable, no matter where it's hosted.

The truth the miracle-sellers won't tell you

Plenty of services will promise to delete anything, anywhere, guaranteed, in 24 hours. In the middle of a crisis, that's exactly what you want to hear. Here's what it leaves out.

No one - no service, no lawyer, no tool - can guarantee that a file is wiped from every server on earth on a 24-hour clock. That isn't a Rulta limitation; it's simply how the internet works. A promise of instant, total, guaranteed deletion is aimed at your panic, not at your problem. The people who make it are counting on you being too frightened to ask how, and hoping you won't be around to notice when it doesn't happen.

We won't do that to you. Some content, like files parked on hosts built specifically to ignore the law, genuinely cannot be force-deleted on command. We say so plainly, because a service that lies to you in week one is not a service that protects you in week four.

And here is the part that matters most: you do not need the file deleted to be protected. You need it unfindable, and making your content unfindable is the first thing we do. Deindexed is not the same as deleted, but to the person hunting for your content, it might as well be. Their guarantee is a feeling. Ours is a result: content made unfindable, fast.

Deletion is the goal we keep pursuing; unfindable is what we deliver while we pursue it.

What we're building next

Being registered in a far-off jurisdiction is not the same as being beyond the law's reach, even if that's exactly the impression these hosts work hard to create.

That's the ground Rulta is moving onto. We're beginning the legal work to reach the jurisdictions a DMCA notice can't touch, and as part of it, we're planning to give our users extra support in pursuing removal through the proper legal channels, so that "hosted somewhere inconvenient" stops being the end of the story.

We'll be honest about the pace. This is deliberate legal work, not a button, built carefully, case by case and country by country. But the direction is set: the places treated as off-limits for too long are exactly the places we're preparing to act.

Where this leaves you

Both halves of the promise, plainly.

Today, our first move in every case is to make your content invisible and unfindable, and we work to do it quickly and reliably, without needing a defiant host's permission. Your content stops being something people can stumble onto.

And next, we're building the muscle to go further: to support real removal even where the law has been slow to follow, working for you, against operators who assumed a foreign address would shield them forever.

Anyone can promise you a miracle. We'd rather give you the truth, the protection that's real today, and the work to keep closing the gap.