DMCA Policy

Last Updated: January 2026


Before anything else we’re an informational website. We write guides about BeeTV. We don’t host movies, we don’t run streaming servers, we don’t store a single video file anywhere. So if someone sent you here because you’re chasing down a copyright issue related to actual streaming content, we’re almost certainly not the right address. That misdirection happens constantly in this niche and we’d rather tell you upfront than waste both our time.

Still here? Good. Let’s talk about how this actually works.


We Don’t Host Copyrighted Content — But Here’s What We Do

Every page on this site is written text. Guides. Installation walkthroughs. Feature explanations. The occasional screenshot used to illustrate a technical point. That’s the entire scope of what lives on our servers.

BeeTV as an application pulls streaming links from external third-party sources across the internet. We explain how that process works, the same way a tech journalist might explain how a search engine indexes web pages. Understanding a technology and operating the infrastructure behind it are two completely different things. We do the former. We have nothing to do with the latter.

If your concern is with content appearing inside the BeeTV application or on one of the external sources it indexes that complaint needs to go somewhere other than here. We have no control over what BeeTV’s developers build, what external sites host, or what links their servers return. Sending a DMCA notice to us about that content is a bit like complaining to a food critic because you didn’t like the restaurant they reviewed.


If Something on This Site Specifically Is the Problem

If you’ve landed here because you genuinely believe something published on this website is actual text, an image, or a piece of written content that uses your copyrighted material without permission, then yes, we want to hear about it.

We’re not going to make you jump through endless hoops. But we do need enough information to actually act on your complaint, and a message that just says “you have my content, remove it” doesn’t give us anything to work with. Here’s what a useful notice looks like:

Tell us who you are. Not vaguely  your name or the name of the organization you represent, and confirmation that you’re either the rights holder or someone formally authorized to act on their behalf. Anonymous complaints don’t go anywhere because there’s no one to follow up with.

Tell us what the content is. Describe the copyrighted work clearly enough that we can identify it. A film title, a written piece, an image  whatever it is, be specific.

Tell us exactly where on this site you found it. A full URL. Not “your website” or “one of your pages” the actual link to the specific page. Without that we’re searching blind and that helps neither of us.

Include a good faith statement. Something confirming that you genuinely believe the use isn’t authorized, not just that you’d prefer it wasn’t there, but that you have real grounds for the complaint.

Confirm that what you’ve told us is accurate. And if you’re acting on someone else’s behalf, confirm that you actually have the authority to do so.


After You Send It

We read every notice. If what you’ve described is actually present on this site and the complaint holds up, we remove it and let you know. If the notice is misdirected and the content you’re describing isn’t something we host, we’ll tell you that clearly rather than just ignoring you.

We’re a small team. We don’t have lawyers on retainer reviewing these in a queue. But we do take them seriously and we respond.


If Your Content Got Removed and You Think That Was Wrong

Maybe a notice came in about something you posted or contributed and you believe the takedown was a mistake. Copyright law gives you the right to push back on that through a counter-notice, and we’ll honor that process.

A proper counter-notice needs your contact details, a description of what was removed and where it used to be, your honest belief that the removal was an error, and your agreement to the relevant legal jurisdiction. 

If your counter-notice is valid we’ll review it and potentially restore the content after the legally required waiting period, assuming the original complainant doesn’t take it to court in the meantime.


The Misdirected Notices Problem

Worth saying one more time because it genuinely comes up regularly: a large portion of the DMCA notices that reach us are meant for someone else entirely.

Some are meant for BeeTV’s actual development team. Some are meant for one of the streaming source sites that BeeTV indexes. Some seem to be sent to every site that ranks for a particular keyword regardless of whether that site has anything to do with the complaint.

We can only act on content that lives on this website. We have no ability to contact BeeTV’s developers on your behalf, no way to instruct external streaming sources to remove content, and no leverage over any infrastructure outside what we directly operate.

If you’re not sure whether your complaint should be directed at us specifically, write to us and ask before filing a formal notice. We’ll tell you honestly whether we’re the right contact or whether you need to look elsewhere  and if it’s the latter, we’ll try to point you in a more useful direction.