A small minority of abuse reports we receive relate to content definitively stored through Cloudflare Stream, Cloudflare Pages, Cloudflare Workers, Cloudflare Workers KV, or Cloudflare Images such that Cloudflare might qualify as the origin hosting provider. If your abuse report pertains to content that we host and that we believe violates the applicable

supplemental terms of service, we will remove or disable access to that content. If we disable access or remove content in response to an abuse report, we generally also notify the website operator of our action and we may make the content available again if appropriate based on the website operator’s response. For certain abuse categories, including copyright and trademark, we follow the notice-and-takedown process set forth in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Cloudflare provides notice to the user of steps to remove or limit access to the content. If the user submits a valid counter notice and the abuse reporter fails to initiate a lawsuit, Cloudflare will restore access to the content.

Our Transparency Report includes details on the requests we receive to disable access to content stored on our network, described as “hosted content.”