OriginalTickets logo
Music

SZA Calls on Black Musicians to Reject AI After Suno Exploited Her Music

SZA urges Black musicians to reject AI following the discovery that generative AI platform Suno, founded by Diplo, used hundreds of her songs without permission.

·Jun 22, 2026·via Rolling Stone
SZA Calls on Black Musicians to Reject AI After Suno Exploited Her Music

Anti AI

SZA Urges Black Musicians to Reject AI After Learning Model Used Hundreds of Her Songs

The singer specifically called out Diplo and the generative AI platform Suno for exploiting artists

By Larisha Paul

Larisha Paul

Contact Larisha Paul on X

- Robert Thurman, Tibet House Co-Founder and Uma Thurman’s Father, Dead at 84 - OG Anunoby Tells Alicia Keys ‘The City’s Asking for You’ Ahead of Knicks Ceremony Performance - Lil Nas X Shares Candid Update on Mental Health Journey: ‘There’s Less Fear in My Heart’

View all posts by Larisha Paul

June 22, 2026

Each time SZA speaks out against AI, she seems to hate it even more than before. While the singer-songwriter has been vocal about her disdain for generative AI models, her latest argument against it comes after learning hundreds of her own songs have been used for training purposes.

In a recent Instagram Story, SZA shared that a search for her name in an AI music database revealed 238 songs were used for training, some of which are unreleased tracks. “If your a musician and you support this degenerate shit?” she wrote. “Your disgusting and there’s NOTHING YOU COULD EVER SAY TO ME TO MAKE THIS OKAY. I hope u have the life u deserve.”

In a more pointed, though less public, post to her private Instagram account, SZA specifically called out the producer and Major Lazer member Diplo for his role in perpetuating exploitation via AI. “lonno who needs to hear this but Diplo has equity in Suno and is actively attempting to train it on the best and brightest Black minds of writers and producers,” she wrote. While he has no clear public ties to Suno, the Wall Street Journal named Diplo as an investor in the billion-dollar AI startup Aaru in March.

Suno is one of the most-used generative-AI services in the world. In 2024, three major record labels sued Suno and Udio, another music-based generative AI model, accusing them of “trampling the rights of copyright owners.” In a legal response, Suno argued that its use of copyrighted music to train its model is legal under fair-use doctrine. The service initially allowed users to craft songs from ChatGPT-style text prompts. Future updates tested the ability to upload videos or photos to inspire songs, in addition to using partial compositions, a cappella vocals, loops, and other audio uploads to create songs.

In April, Diplo went viral for his comments on the allegedly unavoidable future of AI in music. “If you are a creative you need to adapt or just like give up and become an uber driver until everyone has a waymo,” he wrote on X . “I know it’s not cool or classy to speak like this but I’m not gonna candy coat the future – it is what it is … AI will never suffer from bipolar disorder and autism like me and other creative people.”

Editor’s picks

The 250 Greatest Albums of the 21st Century So Far

The 100 Best TV Episodes of All Time

The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

100 Best Movies of the 21st Century

In her post, SZA highlighted a disproportionate reliance on the creative output of Black artists by those utilizing generative AI models. “We make up 13% of the American population yet influence the world w our sound and perspective. I AINT HEARD A WHITE AI SONG YET,” she wrote. “We have no protection in legislature medical or creative. The easiest to steal from. DO NOT GIVE AWAY YOUR VIBRANIUM !!! DO NOT TRAIN AI W YOUR GENIUS. Fuck these weird ass vultures. I want smoke all summer.”

Trending Stories

Karma: Metallica’s Kirk Hammett Falls Off Stage Days After Enraging Swifties

_Originally reported by [Rolling Stone](https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/sza-ai-music-diplo-exploiting-artists-1235581273/)._

Source Attribution

This story is summarized from coverage by Rolling Stone.

Read full story →

Comments

Sign in to join the conversation.

Loading comments…