Doja Cat warns AI tracks are not her leaks

Doja Cat has stated that a batch of songs circulating on X are not her unreleased tracks but instead generated by artificial intelligence.

The rapper posted on X that at least a dozen tracks shared earlier this week were created by AI. She listed titles including Loon1e, Dead Inside and Ball & Chain.

“All of those songs that are leaking that they’re saying are mine are AI. None of it is me,” she wrote. “Really disappointed in everyone thinking that’s me :/ Fuck AI for real.”

Some posts were later removed from the platform after copyright complaints, though they had already gained thousands of views. Doja Cat’s statement follows similar criticism from SZA, who recently condemned the use of artists’ work to train AI models.

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Realistic illustration of Deezer app showing 44% AI-generated music uploads surge, with rising graphs, AI music visuals, and fraud alerts for a news article.
Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Deezer reports 44% of music uploads are now AI-generated amid rising fraud concerns

Ti AI ṣe iroyin Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Deezer disclosed on May 4 that 44 percent of all songs uploaded to its platform—around 75,000 daily—are AI-generated, up sharply from 10 percent in January and 28 percent last September. Despite this surge, the tracks account for just 1-3 percent of listening time, thanks to detection tools that flag 85 percent for demonetization and exclude them from recommendations.

Musicians including SZA and producer Kenneth Blume have voiced strong objections after discovering their songs in datasets used to train AI music generators. The reactions followed the launch of an AI detection tool by The Atlantic last week.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Daphne Joy replied to a comment asking if her twerk video was AI. She stated AI could never replicate it. The post follows an alleged intimate tape leak.

A new report indicates that most companies have released software containing known security flaws. The problem is especially pronounced with AI-created code, which exceeds the speed of manual fixes.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Japanese director Koji Fukada warned at the Cannes Film Festival that AI-generated art risks undermining human creativity.

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