DMCA Force is a content-protection service specializing in adult creators. Per their published service model, they combine automated scanning of major content-host platforms with DMCA notice automation and human-reviewed escalations. Adult creators are the primary client base; the tooling and process are tuned for the volume and pattern of adult-content piracy specifically.
How DMCA enforcement actually works. The DMCA notice-and-takedown regime requires platforms hosting infringing content to remove it upon valid notice; in practice the platforms vary enormously in compliance speed and willingness. Tube sites, file hosts, and forums each have their own submission processes and response patterns. A specialist service automates the volume submission, tracks responses, and escalates non-compliers; what they cannot do is force a platform that simply ignores notices — for those, more expensive legal escalation is required.
Realistic expectations. A good DMCA service can suppress 80–95% of detected piracy from major platforms within days. The remaining 5–20% is a long-tail problem (uncompliant offshore platforms, encrypted file hosts, decentralized distribution) where no service has universal success. Operators who treat DMCA service as "solves piracy" will be disappointed; operators who treat it as "reduces the volume to a manageable level" will be satisfied.
What to ask before signing. What platforms do you monitor? What is the average response time on a takedown notice? What is the success rate on each major platform? What is the pricing structure (per-takedown, monthly retainer, per-creator)? What is the escalation path for non-compliant platforms?
Bottom line. Specialist adult-DMCA services exist for real reasons. See our adult legal overview for the broader DMCA context.