A 301 redirect is the only way to get a URL back into Google. I’ve had to do this many times.
But if DMCA Piracy Prevention starts sending you fake DMCA complaints, a 301 redirect won’t help. They’ll file complaints against the new URLs by the next day. I’ve tried this several times. The redirect only worked once the attack stopped.
I contacted them at
[email protected]
Someone named Michael replied. He promised they’d blacklist my site. But more complaints kept coming in. So I wrote to them a few more times, but didn’t get a response. Then it occurred to me to add “Attn: Michael” to the email subject line, and that helped. He replied, and the complaints stopped coming in.
I don’t know if they really blacklisted my site or why it stopped. I think other webmasters were getting those complaints at the time, and they stopped coming at the same time.
If you want to contact them via email, there’s no point in threatening them. They’re used to that. I literally begged, pleaded, and cried for them to stop. I sent them a few URLs and showed them that I really wasn’t infringing on copyright. I knew that if they didn’t stop, I wouldn’t have any traffic within a month.
I’ve been a full-time adult webmaster since 2001, but my experience with DMCA Piracy Prevention was the worst thing I’ve ever encountered in this business. They literally have the power to destroy any website that gets traffic from Google. It doesn’t matter how many indexed pages the site has. They’re capable of taking down hundreds of URLs a day.