Free Scans
Ensure Proper Attribution for Your Images and Boost Your SEO!
Run one instant free scan for a page URL or image URL and preview likely copies in seconds.
One URL in, a clear preview out
This page is a quick demo of Takedwn. Enter a page URL to check for copied text, or an image URL to check for visual matches across the web — then review the likely copies we find.
- We extract your title + a couple of meaningful content snippets.
- We look for pages that appear to reuse your wording.
- We automatically exclude results from your own site.
- We run a reverse image lookup for the URL you provide.
- We list pages that appear to use the same (or highly similar) image.
- Great for finding reposts, hotlinks, and “borrowed” media.
Find copies, organize evidence, and take action
The free scan is the “one-shot” version. With an account, you can run repeat scans, keep results, and build a clean workflow for protecting your content and images over time.
Run recurring scans so you’re not manually checking the web every month.
- Track new matches over time
- Keep a history of actions
- Stay organized per site/project
Instead of pasting URLs one-by-one, scan your site and build an image list automatically.
- Find images used in pages/posts
- Catch hidden “background” images
- Prioritize what matters
Turn “I think they copied me” into something you can actually work through.
- Clear match lists
- Quick evidence links
- Export/share as needed
Attribution issues can become SEO issues
When your images or text are reused without proper credit, it can dilute brand signals and make it harder for search engines (and people) to associate the work with you. Takedwn helps you find reuse early and choose what to do next.
Spot where your assets are being reused so you can decide whether to request credit or removal.
Copied content can siphon attention. Finding copies gives you options: attribution, links, or takedown.
No more manual searching and spreadsheets. One place to scan, review, and track outcomes.
Quick answers
Common questions from first-time scanners.