DMCA & opt-out policy
Last updated: 2026-05-11
What we collect
PromptShot curates publicly posted X (Twitter) tweets that share image-to-video prompts. For each curated tweet we store:
- The tweet ID, URL, public engagement counts, and your @handle (attribution)
- The verbatim prompt text the post contained
- A copy of the result video / reference image, hosted on our CDN for fast loading
We do not claim ownership of any prompt or video. Each case page links back to your original tweet and includes your handle as the visible byline.
Author opt-out — fastest path
If you are the original creator of a tweet we have included and you want it removed, email opt-out@videoez.ai with:
- The PromptShot URL of the case (e.g. /cases/<slug>)
- The tweet URL it was sourced from
- Confirmation that the X account in the byline is yours (a reply tweet from the account works)
We aim to remove cases within 72 hours of a verified author opt-out request, including all derivatives (videos, OG images, sitemap entries).
Formal DMCA notice (rights holders / agents)
For takedown requests under 17 U.S.C. § 512(c), submit a written notice to dmca@videoez.ai containing:
- A physical or electronic signature of the rights holder or authorized agent.
- Identification of the copyrighted work (or representative list).
- The exact PromptShot URL(s) of the allegedly infringing material.
- Your contact information (address, telephone, email).
- A good-faith statement that the use is not authorized.
- A statement, under penalty of perjury, that the information is accurate and you are authorized to act on behalf of the rights holder.
We reserve the right to publish a redacted version of valid DMCA notices in a public transparency log (your contact information will not be disclosed).
Counter-notice
If you believe a takedown was issued in error, you may submit a counter-notice to the same address. We will restore the content per § 512(g) procedure unless the original claimant files a lawsuit within 10 business days.
Repeat infringers
We terminate, in appropriate circumstances, the participation of users or sources that are repeat infringers.