TheGreat70s (https://www.thegreat70s.com) is an editorial and nostalgia website. We do not upload, store, or host video files on our servers. Music videos, channels, and related playback on this site are provided through embedded YouTube players and the YouTube API.
Where to Report Copyright Infringement
If you believe a video infringes your copyright, you must direct your notice to YouTube (Google), which hosts the video and operates the platform's copyright complaint process.
To report infringing content on YouTube, use Google's official tools:
How to report copyright infringement on YouTube — step-by-step guidance from YouTube Help.
YouTube Content ID & copyright management — for rights holders managing claims at scale.
YouTube Copyright Policy — overview of how YouTube handles copyright.
Our Role
Because TheGreat70s only embeds or links to videos already published on YouTube, we cannot remove a video from YouTube's servers. Removing or blocking a video must be done through YouTube's process. Once a video is removed or restricted on YouTube, it will no longer play in embeds on our site.
If you have already filed a successful takedown with YouTube and a video still appears referenced on our pages, please contact us with the YouTube video URL and confirmation of your YouTube claim so we can review removing or updating our editorial references to that embed.
DMCA Agent (Site Content Only)
This section applies only to original text, images, or other materials hosted directly on https://www.thegreat70s.com — not to third-party videos on YouTube.
If you believe content on our website (other than embedded YouTube videos) infringes your copyright, submit a notice through our contact form (choose the Copyright / DMCA topic) that includes: (1) identification of the copyrighted work; (2) identification of the material on our site and its URL; (3) your contact information; (4) a statement of good-faith belief that use is not authorized; (5) a statement under penalty of perjury that your notice is accurate; and (6) your physical or electronic signature.
We will respond to valid notices regarding site-hosted content in accordance with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Repeat infringers may have access terminated where applicable.
Counter-Notification
If your content was removed from YouTube and you believe the removal was mistaken, follow YouTube's counter-notification process described in YouTube's copyright help documentation. Counter-notifications for embedded videos are handled by YouTube, not by us.
Contact
For site-hosted copyright issues or follow-up after a YouTube takedown, use our contact form.
Last updated: June 1, 2026.