Briefings
Takedown briefings
Plain, honest explainers on how content removal actually works — which route fits which case, what comes down, and what can only be pushed down.
How to Get Someone Banned on Instagram Without Bots
To get someone banned on Instagram you file the specific reports Meta actually acts on — impersonation, harassment, non-consensual intimate images, credible threats, or copyright — via the in-app menu or the dedicated form for your case. There is no fixed report count, no user-invokable IP ban, and no legitimate mass-report bot. A single well-evidenced report from a genuine victim outperforms a hundred noisy ones, and coordinated brigades often get the reporters actioned instead of the target.
How to Get Someone Banned on TikTok: The Honest Answer
You cannot actually get someone banned on TikTok — account bans are algorithmic strikes issued by TikTok itself, not something any outside user can trigger on demand. A Community Guidelines report flags a specific violation for review, but volume alone does not decide the outcome. If your real goal is stopping harmful content about you, the lawful levers are removal notices — DMCA, defamation, NCII takedowns under the Take It Down Act.
Confidential case review · no obligation
Send us the link. We'll tell you honestly whether it comes down.
Every case starts with a private review: we look at the content, tell you which route can work — platform policy, DMCA, legal notice, right to be forgotten, or suppression — and give you a plain assessment before any commitment.