Category: Remove False Accusations from the Internet

  • Remove False Allegations Published on Crikey and Other Australian Blogs


    How to Handle False Allegations Published on Crikey and Other Australian Blogs

    Blogs and independent outlets like Crikey play a big role in shaping public opinion in Australia. While these platforms claim to offer investigative journalism and alternative perspectives, they also publish one-sided or unverified allegations that can ruin reputations overnight. Once your name or business is tied to a damaging Crikey article or mentioned in an Australian blog, it can dominate Google search results and define how people see you.

    At Reputation Station, we specialise in dealing with false allegations published on sites like Crikey and other blogs across Australia. We remove, de-index, and suppress damaging content so you’re not permanently judged by misinformation.

    📧 info@reputationstation.com.au
    📞 1800 622 359


    Why Crikey and Blogs Are a Threat to Your Reputation

    • Google visibility: Articles from Crikey and other established blogs rank quickly.
    • Perceived authority: Readers believe “investigative” content must be factual.
    • Low accountability: Bloggers don’t face the same editorial standards as mainstream newspapers.
    • Viral reach: Allegations are shared on social media and forums, multiplying damage.
    • Permanence: Articles stay live indefinitely unless challenged.

    For individuals and businesses, this means one false blog post can overshadow years of hard work.


    Common False Allegations We See

    • Fraud and scam claims — often exaggerated or fabricated.
    • Links to corruption or misconduct without evidence.
    • Personal smears disguised as commentary or opinion pieces.
    • Old disputes revived to create sensationalist stories.
    • Unverified “leaks” treated as fact.

    Even if baseless, these allegations stick to your name in Google, creating long-term reputational harm.


    Why Blogs Are Harder to Remove Than Newspapers

    Unlike outlets such as Sydney Morning Herald or The Age, blogs like Crikey operate with more freedom. They can publish content without the same editorial checks and are often resistant to takedown requests. Some bloggers even thrive on controversy and refuse to remove damaging material.

    That’s why you need a strategy that combines takedown efforts with suppression and de-indexing.


    How Reputation Station Handles False Blog Allegations

    1. Direct Publisher Requests

    We contact site owners and editors with formal takedown demands, backed by Australian defamation and privacy law.

    2. Google De-Indexing

    When publishers refuse, we escalate to Google. If the content is harmful, outdated, or misleading, we push for it to be de-indexed from Australian search results.

    3. Suppression Campaigns

    We build optimised, positive content around your name or business to outrank false allegations. This ensures damaging blogs are buried deep in Google where almost nobody sees them.

    4. Network-Wide Coverage

    False allegations often spread across multiple blogs. We tackle all mentions to make sure suppression is comprehensive.

    5. Ongoing Monitoring

    We track your name across blogs and forums to intercept new attacks before they gain traction.


    Why Suppression Is So Effective

    Most Australians don’t read past page one of Google. That means if we push Crikey or blog allegations to page two or three, their impact drops dramatically. Suppression allows you to control what people see first — professional profiles, positive media, and accurate information.


    Case Examples (Anonymous)

    • A Melbourne professional falsely accused of misconduct in a blog post had the link de-indexed from Google and replaced with professional content dominating page one.
    • A Sydney small business owner targeted by a smear piece on Crikey used suppression campaigns to bury the article beneath positive press and customer reviews.
    • A Brisbane entrepreneur faced defamatory coverage across multiple blogs. Our suppression strategy replaced those results with business achievements and industry recognition.

    Why Australians Choose Reputation Station

    • 14+ years’ experience tackling blog and alternative media defamation.
    • Proven results removing, de-indexing, and suppressing Crikey and other blog content.
    • Confidential, discreet service protecting both individuals and businesses.
    • Action-focused approach — we don’t just advise, we fix the problem.

    Don’t Let Blogs Define Your Reputation

    False allegations on Crikey or any other blog don’t need to be the first thing people see when they Google your name. With the right strategy, damaging content can be removed, buried, or neutralised.

    📧 info@reputationstation.com.au
    📞 1800 622 359

  • Takedown Strategy for Channel 7 News Articles in Google – How to Remove or Suppress TV Media Coverage in Australia

    When Channel 7 News publishes a story about you or your business — especially online via 7News.com.au — it can sit on Page 1 of Google permanently. Whether it’s an old legal matter, a business dispute, or just one-sided reporting, the article can dominate search results and cost you opportunities.

    At Reputation Ace, we specialise in removing or suppressing damaging content from high-authority Australian media outlets — including Channel 7, 7News.com.au, and affiliated video content that surfaces in Google and YouTube.


    Why Channel 7 Articles Are So Damaging

    Unlike print-only articles, Channel 7 coverage often includes:

    • Video content that appears in search and YouTube
    • Written articles that carry your full name or business name in the URL, headline, and metadata
    • Widespread syndication across other Seven West Media properties (Yahoo News, regional news, mobile apps)
    • User comment sections that amplify public perception

    Even if the article is dated or resolved, it keeps showing up — and in Australia, Channel 7 rarely responds to individual takedown requests unless a legal basis is clearly laid out.


    Our Full Strategy to Remove or Neutralise Channel 7 News Coverage

    🔴 1. Direct Legal-Style Takedown Attempts

    We contact Channel 7’s legal or editorial team with a formally structured takedown or amendment request. These are never emotional — we use legally grounded arguments and submit:

    • Evidence of outdated, harmful, or no-longer-relevant information
    • Privacy breaches, especially for non-public figures
    • Cases involving spent convictions
    • Examples of ongoing harm to employment or safety
    • Any court orders, suppression notices, or resolved legal matters

    We’ll push for takedown, redaction, or at the very least, a metadata/SEO adjustment to reduce Google visibility.

    🟡 2. Google De-Indexing Requests

    If Channel 7 won’t touch it, we take it up with Google directly.

    Google may remove the article from search results if:

    • It features outdated, excessive, or irrelevant personal information
    • The article causes ongoing mental distress or reputational harm
    • The individual is no longer of public interest
    • It involves legal matters that are resolved, suppressed, or spent

    We handle the case file submission to Google from start to finish — no effort required on your part.

    🟢 3. Suppression via Page 1 Domination

    When legal and platform requests don’t work, we build stronger content to outrank the article. This is the tactic that wins over time — and we’re experts at it.

    Here’s what we deploy:

    • Optimised business and personal profiles across authority domains
    • Press releases with SEO structure
    • Microsites, blogs, and brand-neutral assets
    • Video content and social signals
    • Controlled directory placements and local search profiles

    This content builds link authority and trust, and as Google sees it gain momentum, the Channel 7 article slides down the rankings.

    🔄 4. Long-Term Reputation Control

    We monitor the search terms every month and reinforce the strongest-performing assets. The result? The article doesn’t come back — and your online profile stays clean, controlled, and professional.


    What You Can Expect

    We work fast. We begin as soon as you’re onboarded.
    You’ll see early movement within 3–5 days, and full Page 1 changes often occur within 3–4 months.

    We charge $995 AUD/month, rolling month to month — no setup fees, no contract. We stay on it until it’s gone or buried.


    Let’s Clean It Up

    To get started, send us:

    • Your full name or business name
    • A link to the Channel 7 article or video
    • Any legal context, corrections, or privacy risks if known

    We’ll review your case and reply with a tailored plan.


    📞 Click to call: 1800 622 359
    ✉️ info@reputationace.com
    🌐 www.reputationace.com


  • Can You Remove False Accusations from the Internet in Australia? Reputation Station Explains


    Being falsely accused of something online is like being shouted at in public — but the shouting never stops, and the internet never forgets.

    Whether it’s a Reddit thread, a fake review, a blog post, or even a social media comment that went viral, false accusations have a way of spreading fast and sinking deep. And the worst part? You can be totally innocent, but if it shows up in Google search when someone types your name — you’re guilty by association in the eyes of the public.

    At Reputation Station, we specialise in helping Australians remove, suppress, or counteract false accusations online — fast, legally, and quietly. Because the longer they stay online, the more damage they do.


    False accusations online: where they usually show up

    Most people think “defamation” only happens in big media stories. But false accusations can spread from dozens of everyday places:

    • A one-star Google review calling you a scammer
    • A Facebook post claiming you were abusive or dishonest
    • A Reddit comment dragging your name through the mud
    • A dodgy forum post full of lies
    • A complaint site you’ve never even heard of
    • A blog post with a twisted version of the truth
    • An ex, competitor, or troll posting anonymously

    And all it takes is one of those posts to be indexed by Google… and suddenly it’s the first thing someone sees when they look you up.

    That could cost you a job, a contract, a relationship, or your peace of mind.


    Can you actually remove false accusations from the internet in Australia?

    Yes — but it depends on how and where it was posted.

    At Reputation Station, we assess every situation individually. If the post or content meets certain criteria — like being defamatory, false, in breach of a platform’s terms, or targeted abuse — we can usually get it removed or de-indexed.

    That includes:

    ✅ Formal defamation complaints
    ✅ Takedown notices under Australian privacy law
    ✅ Platform-level abuse reports (Google, Facebook, Reddit, etc.)
    ✅ Legal threats to publishers or site admins
    ✅ Direct negotiation for content takedown
    ✅ Google de-indexing requests (right to be forgotten in some cases)

    If removal isn’t an option, we launch a content suppression strategy to overpower the false accusation online. That means publishing accurate, reputation-building content — on your terms — across trusted, high-ranking sites to push the lies off page one.


    “But I don’t want to make a big deal out of it…”

    You don’t have to. In fact, discretion is key.

    We don’t stir the pot or draw attention to the accusation. We don’t argue in public. We don’t make things worse.

    We work behind the scenes — quietly contacting platforms, building content, and re-engineering your Google presence so that when someone looks you up… they see you, not the lie.


    We’ve helped real people clear their names — and we can help you too

    From entrepreneurs and tradespeople to teachers, lawyers, and stay-at-home parents — we’ve helped Australians just like you:

    • A Melbourne mum accused of being a bad landlord — the post was false, the review was removed, and her business bounced back.
    • A Sydney business coach attacked by a competitor — false claims across several forums were taken down, and we built out a new content wall to block further hits.
    • A Perth student named in a slanderous tweet — we got it deleted, suppressed the cache, and cleared his name from Google within weeks.

    This is what we do. Every day. Quietly. Effectively.


    You didn’t deserve the accusation — but you deserve to be free of it

    False accusations ruin lives. But only if they’re left unanswered.

    📞 1800 622 359
    📩 info@reputationstation.com.au
    🌐 www.reputationstation.com.au

    Let’s get the truth back on top — and take your name off the chopping block.