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DMCA Notice & Takedown

Last updated: May 20, 2026 · CP Global Dynamics LLC d/b/a Beverly Hills Growth

The short version. If you believe content on beverlyhillsgrowth.com infringes a copyright you own or control, send a DMCA notice to the designated agent below. If your content was removed and you believe the removal was a mistake, you may file a counter-notice. We follow the DMCA safe-harbor procedure (17 U.S.C. § 512) and respond in good faith.

1. Designated agent

Send DMCA notices to our designated agent:

2. Filing a DMCA notice (notice of claimed infringement)

To be effective under 17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(3), your notice must include all of the following:

  1. A physical or electronic signature of a person authorized to act on behalf of the copyright owner.
  2. Identification of the copyrighted work claimed to have been infringed (or a representative list, for multiple works).
  3. Identification of the material on our site that is claimed to be infringing, with enough specificity (full URL + a description) to let us locate it.
  4. Your contact information: address, telephone number, email.
  5. A statement that you have a good-faith belief that the use of the material is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent, or the law.
  6. A statement, under penalty of perjury, that the information in the notice is accurate and that you are authorized to act on behalf of the copyright owner.

Notices that omit any of the above may not be actionable. Sending a knowingly false notice exposes you to liability under § 512(f).

3. What we do when we receive a valid notice

  1. We acknowledge receipt within 5 business days.
  2. If we agree the material is reasonably likely to be infringing, we remove or disable access to it as expeditiously as reasonably possible.
  3. We notify the person who posted or supplied the material (if applicable; our site has no public-user upload surface, so this typically applies only to client-supplied content we hosted on a client's behalf).
  4. If a counter-notice is filed, we forward it to you. If you do not file a court action within 10 to 14 business days, we may restore the material.

4. Filing a counter-notice

If your material was removed and you believe in good faith it should not have been, you may file a counter-notice under § 512(g)(3). The counter-notice must include:

  1. Your physical or electronic signature.
  2. Identification of the material that was removed and the location at which it appeared before removal.
  3. A statement, under penalty of perjury, that you have a good-faith belief the material was removed as a result of mistake or misidentification.
  4. Your name, address, telephone number, and email; a statement that you consent to the jurisdiction of the US Federal District Court for the Central District of California; and a statement that you will accept service of process from the original complainant.

Send counter-notices to the designated agent listed in Section 1.

5. Repeat-infringer policy

We do not operate a user-content platform. If we ever do, we will terminate the accounts of users who are repeat infringers as required by § 512(i)(1)(A). For now, this section is a placeholder.

6. Other intellectual-property complaints

For trademark complaints, right-of-publicity complaints, or other intellectual-property concerns that are not copyright-DMCA matters, email the designated agent with subject IP complaint and a description of the issue. We will respond in good faith.

7. Counter-notice good-faith

Knowingly filing a false counter-notice is a violation of § 512(f) and can result in liability for damages including costs and attorney fees. If you are unsure whether your situation qualifies, consult a lawyer.