DMCA.com is the original DMCA-as-a-service provider, predating most of the adult-specialist competitors. Their core product is the "DMCA Protected" badge (a visual marker creators display on their sites) plus takedown-notice tooling. They serve a much broader market than adult specifically — mainstream content sites, photographers, businesses — which is both an advantage (process maturity, scale) and a limitation (less adult-platform-specific automation).
What you get. The protected-badge service (a deterrent more than an enforcement mechanism — the badge signals that infringers can expect a DMCA response). Free and paid tiers; paid tiers add automated takedown submission, monitoring, and case management. The pricing is predictable and transparent compared to bespoke adult-specialist quotes.
Adult-vertical considerations. DMCA.com's automation covers major platforms but may not be as tuned to specific adult tube sites and file hosts as specialist services like DMCA Force or Takedown Piracy. For adult creators, the trade-off is reach vs depth: DMCA.com is broader but less adult-specific.
Who it fits. Operators wanting a mainstream-scale service with transparent pricing and self-serve tooling; creators with mixed content (some adult, some not) where a single service covering both is operationally simpler.
Bottom line. Credible default service. Compare against adult-specialist alternatives (DMCA Force, Takedown Piracy) if your content is heavily adult-vertical.