For two decades, my work has sat at the intersection of creativity and protection. Starting as a musician and studing music through to university, before moving into security roles across retail, events, and the London 2012 Olympics.
That background led into anti-piracy work with a global music industry trade body, where I worked on copyright enforcement for the three major record labels. I later joined an international law firm, supporting clients across publishing, technology, pharmaceuticals, and sport on issues including copyright infringement, trademark abuse, email phishing, data leaks, and counterfeiting.
Over that time, piracy has drastically mutated. More people now rely on digital content and platforms for income, but control has moved away from creators and businesses towards online platforms and opaque enforcement processes. At the same time, new technologies have made it easier to copy, distribute, and monetise other people’s work at scale.
Stop Content Theft is built around that reality. The aim is not just removing infringing content, but understanding how and where it spreads, and applying targeted enforcement alongside practical, ongoing advice to reduce repeat infringement.
Alongside commercial work with creators, brands, and agencies, pro bono support is provided to charities and advocacy groups dealing with issues such as non-consensual intimate image abuse, doxxing, impersonation, and online harassment, including both enforcement and education.
If you are dealing with content misuse or want to understand where your content is being distributed, get in touch.