God Hip – DMCA Policy

Created by Jeremy “JTWayne” Tubbs
Last Updated: December 2025

God Hip respects the rights of artists, creators, and copyright owners. All music, artwork, and content on GodHip.com is either owned by Jeremy “JTWayne” Tubbs or used with permission. This DMCA Policy explains how we handle copyright complaints and takedown requests.


1. Copyright Protection

All content on God Hip—music, audio files, graphics, logos, text, and design—is protected by U.S. copyright law.
Unauthorized copying, downloading, distributing, or uploading copyrighted material without permission is strictly prohibited.


2. Reporting Copyright Infringement (DMCA Takedown Request)

If you believe that your copyrighted work has been used on GodHip.com without permission, you may send a DMCA Takedown Notice.

Your notice must include the following:

  1. Your full name or the name of the copyright owner

  2. Your contact information (email address is required)

  3. A clear description of the copyrighted work you believe was infringed

  4. A direct link (URL) to the content on God Hip that you believe violates your copyright

  5. A statement saying:
    “I have a good-faith belief that the use of this material is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent, or the law.”

  6. A statement saying:
    “Under penalty of perjury, I am the owner of the copyright or authorized to act on the owner's behalf.”

  7. Your electronic or physical signature


3. How to Submit Your DMCA Notice

You may submit your notice through the contact form on GodHip.com or by emailing our DMCA team:

DMCA Contact:
God Hip Support Team
(Insert your support email here if you want one)


4. What Happens After You Submit a Notice

Once we receive a valid DMCA notice:

  • The reported content may be removed or disabled immediately.

  • The user who posted it may be notified.

  • Repeat copyright violations may lead to account suspension or removal.


5. Counter-Notification

If a user believes their content was removed by mistake or misidentification, they may file a DMCA Counter-Notice including:

  1. Their name and contact information

  2. Identification of the removed content

  3. A statement saying:
    “I have a good-faith belief that this content was removed as a result of mistake or misidentification.”

  4. Consent to U.S. legal jurisdiction

  5. Their electronic signature

If a valid counter-notice is received, the content may be restored unless the complaining copyright owner begins legal action.


6. Repeat Infringers

God Hip reserves the right to suspend or terminate accounts that repeatedly violate copyright laws or submit copyrighted content without permission.


7. Good Faith

All DMCA notices and counter-notices must be filed in good faith. Submitting false claims may result in legal consequences.

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