Notice & Takedown
Last updated: May 2026.
Oakrift is a media-intelligence service operated by Whitescale Labs LLC. This page explains how to notify us about content concerns. It covers two separate processes:
- Copyright complaints — if you believe material on Oakrift infringes a copyright you own or are authorized to represent.
- Correction and content requests — if you are the subject of an Oakrift intelligence brief, or are referenced in one, and believe it contains inaccurate, misleading, or otherwise harmful statements about you.
Please use the process that fits your concern. Both are described below.
1. Copyright Complaints (DMCA)
Oakrift respects intellectual property rights and responds to clear notices of alleged copyright infringement that comply with the U.S. Digital Millennium Copyright Act ("DMCA").
How to submit a copyright notice
Send a written notice to our designated copyright agent:
Designated Copyright Agent Copyright Agent, Whitescale Labs LLC Email: legal@oakrift.com Phone: 954-982-8095 Mail: 390 NE 191st St STE 47651, Miami, FL 33179 U.S. Copyright Office Registration: DMCA-1073076
To be effective, your notice must include substantially all of the following (these requirements come from 17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(3)):
- A physical or electronic signature of the copyright owner or a person authorized to act on their behalf.
- Identification of the copyrighted work you claim has been infringed (or, if multiple works, a representative list).
- Identification of the material you claim is infringing, with enough detail for us to locate it — including the specific URL, brief identifier, or other location on Oakrift.
- Your contact information — name, mailing address, telephone number, and email address.
- A statement that you have a good-faith belief that the disputed use is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent, or the law.
- A statement, made under penalty of perjury, that the information in your notice is accurate and that you are the copyright owner or are authorized to act on the owner's behalf.
What happens after you submit a copyright notice
We will acknowledge receipt of your notice, typically within a few business days after we receive it. If the notice is complete and we determine that removal or disabling of access is appropriate, we will act expeditiously to remove or disable access to the material identified. We may contact you if your notice is incomplete or unclear.
A complete notice helps us act quickly. Notices that do not substantially comply with the requirements above may delay our response or may not be actionable.
A note on false claims
Submitting a copyright notice is a legal act. Under 17 U.S.C. § 512(f), a person who knowingly and materially misrepresents that material is infringing may be liable for damages, including costs and attorneys' fees. Please do not use this process for material that you do not have a good-faith basis to believe infringes your rights.
Counter-notification
If material you posted or provided to Oakrift was removed or disabled in response to a copyright notice, and you believe the removal was the result of a mistake or misidentification, you may submit a counter-notification.
To begin a counter-notification, contact legal@oakrift.com and we will provide the requirements and process.
Repeat infringers
Oakrift maintains and enforces a policy of terminating, in appropriate circumstances, the accounts of users who are determined to be repeat infringers of copyright. We may also remove material and limit access to the service in response to infringement concerns, with or without notice, at our discretion.
2. Correction and Content Requests
Oakrift produces AI-generated intelligence briefs that interpret and summarize publicly available information about companies and individuals. These briefs are interpretive analysis, not verified statements of fact. They are generated by automated systems and may contain errors, omissions, or mischaracterizations.
An intelligence brief is an automated, AI-generated summary that Oakrift produces about a company, person, or topic based on publicly available news, social media, and other public sources.
If you are the subject of a brief, or are referenced in one, and you believe it contains inaccurate, misleading, or harmful statements about you, we want to hear from you. This process is separate from the copyright process above.
How to submit a correction request
Send your request to corrections@oakrift.com. To help us review it quickly, please include:
- Your name and contact information, and your relationship to the content (for example, that you are the subject of the brief or their authorized representative).
- Identification of the specific brief and, where possible, the specific statement or passage you are concerned about — a URL, share link, or brief identifier is most helpful.
- A clear explanation of what you believe is inaccurate, misleading, or harmful, and — where you are able to provide it — any information or public sources that support your position.
- What outcome you are seeking (for example, correction, annotation, or removal).
You do not need an Oakrift account to submit a correction request.
What happens after you submit a correction request
- We will acknowledge receipt of your request, typically within a few business days after we receive it.
- We will review the request and respond with the outcome of our review, typically within ten to fifteen business days after acknowledgment. More complex requests may take longer; if so, we will tell you.
- Where a request raises a concern of urgent or significant harm, we will prioritize our review accordingly.
Possible outcomes of a review include correcting or annotating the content, restricting or removing it, or — where we do not believe a change is warranted — explaining our reasoning to you. We review each request on its own facts. Submitting a request does not guarantee a particular outcome, and we may decline requests that are unclear, unsupported, or not made in good faith.
Please submit requests in good faith. We treat correction requests as serious and will investigate them. We may decline or deprioritize requests that appear to be made for purposes unrelated to genuine concerns about the content (for example, competitive disruption).
We treat correction requests confidentially. We will not share your identity or the substance of your request with the customer who generated the brief or with any other party, except where necessary for our review or where disclosure is required by law.
We keep a record of correction requests and the actions we take in response to them. When we receive a correction request, we also preserve a record of the content as it existed at the time of the request, even if we later modify, restrict, or remove the version we publish.
3. General Notes
- Use the right process. Copyright complaints go to legal@oakrift.com; correction and content requests go to corrections@oakrift.com. If you are unsure, legal@oakrift.com will route your message.
- Other legal notices. For other legal matters concerning Oakrift or Whitescale Labs LLC, contact legal@oakrift.com.
- This page may be updated. We may revise this page from time to time. Material changes will be reflected in the "Last updated" line at the top of this page, and changes take effect when posted.
- This Notice & Takedown process is part of, and should be read together with, the Oakrift Terms of Service, Acceptable Use Policy, and Privacy Policy.