Digital Millennium Copyright Act Notice

Copyright & DMCA Policy | Claims of Copyright Infringement & Related Issues (17 USC § 512 et seq.)

We respect creators and their work. If you believe that something we’ve posted or hosted uses your copyrighted material without permission, you can let us know under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (17 U.S.C. §512).

To help us review your claim quickly, your written notice must include:

  1. Details of the copyrighted work you believe has been infringed (or a list if there are several).
  2. A description or link showing us exactly where the material appears on our site or platform.
  3. Your name, address, phone number, and email so we can follow up.
  4. A statement, signed physically or electronically, that:

Once we receive a valid notice, we’ll review and, if appropriate, remove or disable access to the content. Filing false claims is against federal law, so please be sure your report is correct before submitting it.

If your content was taken down and you believe that was an error, you can send a counter notice that includes:

  1. Your signature (physical or electronic).
  2. What was removed and where it appeared before removal.
  3. A statement under penalty of perjury that the material was removed due to mistake or misidentification.
  4. Your name, address, and phone number, plus a statement consenting to the jurisdiction of U.S. federal court for your area (or any district where we operate if you’re outside the U.S.) and agreeing to accept service of process from the person who filed the original claim.

Designated DMCA Agent

My Real Estate Company™ (Too™ by MyRECo™)

Attn: DMCA Designated Agent - DMCA Team

My Real Estate Company Inc. / My Real Estate Company Too, LLC 11 E 18th St. #425 Spencer, IA 51301

[email protected]

This information is provided to help you understand our process and your rights. It’s not legal advice. You can learn more about the DMCA at www.copyright.gov.

This information is provided to help you understand our process and your rights. It’s not legal advice. You can learn more about the DMCA at www.copyright.gov.

If you give notice of copyright infringement by e-mail, an agent may begin investigating the alleged copyright infringement; however, we must receive your signed statement by mail or as an attachment to your e-mail before we are required to take any action.