DMCA Notice
KidsGamesOnline is a tile-first browser arcade where every game launches in seconds, no install, no checkout, no fuss.
We respect the intellectual-property rights of others and ask visitors to do the same. This page outlines how to file a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)-style notice (or any other copyright claim) about material you believe appears on KidsGamesOnline without permission, and how to react if you suspect we pulled the wrong tile.
Reporting copyright concerns
If you have a good-faith belief that material on the lobby infringes a copyright you control or are authorised to enforce, please send a written notice covering each item below. Incomplete notices can be delayed or rejected, so please be precise.
- Your work — describe the copyrighted material (title, summary, link to an authorised copy where one exists, registration number if applicable).
- Location in the lobby — the exact URL(s) on KidsGamesOnline where the material appears, or a clear description of where it was found.
- Contact details — your full name, postal address, phone number, and email.
- Authority — a statement that you are the rights holder or are authorised to act on behalf of the rights holder.
- Good faith — a statement that you believe in good faith the use is not authorised by the rights holder, their agent, or the law.
- Accuracy — a statement, under penalty of perjury, that the information in your notice is accurate and, where you are not the owner, that you are authorised to act for the owner.
Where to send notices
Copyright / DMCA contact
Email: contact@kidsgamesonline.ca
The notice you submit may be passed along to whichever party originally placed the content. Misrepresenting infringement carries real liability — including responsibility for our own legal costs — so we strongly suggest checking with a qualified lawyer in your jurisdiction whenever the situation looks even slightly uncertain.
Counter-notice
Should removal or access blocking strike you as a mistake, a counter-notice is the natural response. An effective counter-notice typically lists the removed material together with its prior URL, supplies your full contact information, includes a perjury-clause statement that the takedown was an error in your good-faith opinion, and confirms acceptance of the jurisdiction of the United States federal court covering your residence (or the U.S. district designated by us when the sender lives outside the United States), plus a willingness to accept service from the party who first filed the original notice.
Counter-notices land in the same inbox. Within the standard United States DMCA timetable, restored access often arrives between ten and fourteen business days following submission, provided no court action intercepts the process and the laws covering your specific case allow that timing.
Approach to repeat infringers
The lobby reserves the option to restrict accounts or block visitors who emerge as repeat infringers, and the notice records may be retained for that purpose. None of the wording above narrows any independent enforcement remedy available under our Terms of Use.
Trademarks and adjacent concerns
DMCA, by design, deals primarily with copyright. Trademark, defamation, or other legal questions can still be sent to the same address — just please flag the subject line clearly so triage moves quickly. We do not act as a tribunal; when facts remain disputed the lobby may step into neutral territory (for example, lifting the contested material) while the involved parties pursue resolution wherever the law permits that approach.
