Doja Cat Denies Viral Leaks, Calls Them AI-Generated: ‘F**k AI’

Doja Cat says a batch of recent leaked tracks are AI-generated, calling out the technology and denying the recordings on X on June 23.

When a cluster of new tracks attributed to Doja Cat began floating around the internet this month, the superstar pushed back hard and fast: they were not hers, and she blamed artificial intelligence.

On Tuesday, June 23, Doja took to X to draw a line under the rumours. “All of those songs that are leaking that theyre saying are mine are AI,” she wrote, setting a blunt tone that she would repeat across several posts.

“All of those songs that are leaking that theyre saying are mine are AI,”

She reposted a fan who had noticed the unusual cadence of the leaks — “Ok thank you because something was off with the amount they were ‘leaking.'” — and then doubled down with a follow-up that left little room for misinterpretation.

“None of it is me. Really disappointed in everyone thinking thats me :/ F**k AI for real.”

Still, the tracks did not stay online for long. The files were pulled quickly after surfacing, a move that only amplified debate among listeners: if the songs were fake, why were they being removed and treated as copyrighted material?

The conversation on X

Some fans suspected that takedowns were evidence the material was authentic. “if them AI why would she immediately take em down n copyright em? she full of bs,” one person wrote on X.

Others were convinced the music’s inventiveness pointed to a human hand rather than an algorithm. “Ai cant make that ‘Human Nature song’ and Als suno makes the most realistic sounding music, and they are NOT permitted to sample,” another user said on X. “a human has to manually go into the studio n make this! and its too creative! Suno is very generic. And doesnt have the creative capacity 2 make it.”

When someone challenged Doja directly and accused her of being untruthful, the rapper answered without ceremony: “I’m not. why are you lying to yourself.”

For context, Dojas posts are presented below in the screenshots she shared and in the screenshots fans circulated after the clips began to appear online.

X/Doja CatDoja Cat posts.

Doja Cat/XDoja Cat re-posts.

Doja Cat/XDoja Cat posts.

Whether these were early demos, deepfaked copies, or something else entirely, the exchange underlines how quickly questions about AI authenticity can ripple through a pop stars audience — and how indivisible those questions have become from a musician’s public identity.

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