Timbaland Given 24 Hours To Apologize To Producer K Fresh Over AI Beat Scandal

Timbaland

Timbaland is under pressure after allegedly using K Fresh’s beat without approval to promote Suno’s AI tool, prompting legal threats.

Timbaland is facing backlash and potential legal action after allegedly using K Fresh’s beat without consent to promote an artificial intelligence music tool developed by Suno, where the legendary producer serves as an advisor.

In an open letter posted online on Friday (June 20), K Fresh and his attorney, Ryan Schmidt, accused the Grammy-winning producer of uploading one of K Fresh’s original tracks to Suno’s platform, then using it to generate an unauthorized AI remix.

“There was no credit. No consent. No apology,” the letter stated.

The controversy centers on a demo Timbaland shared to showcase Suno’s AI capabilities. Rather than using his own extensive catalog, the producer allegedly selected a beat created by K Fresh without asking for permission.

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“With over 30 years of music in his own catalog, he had every opportunity to use something he actually owns. Instead, he used someone else’s work without permission,” the letter said.

The letter also claims Timbaland’s actions violated U.S. copyright law and Suno’s own terms of service, which require users to own the content they upload.

“This wasn’t just unethical; it violated U.S. copyright law and breached Suno’s own Terms of Use, which require users to own any uploaded content,” the letter continues. “As a result, K Fresh’s music is now permanently part of Suno’s training model without his consent.”

Suno has yet to respond publicly to the allegations, a silence that K Fresh’s team says only deepens the issue.

“Suno’s continued silence is just as troubling. Your silence sends a message: that respecting the rights of creators is optional.”

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Timbaland has been a vocal supporter of AI in music, launching his own company, Stage Zero, and introducing a virtual artist named TaTa.

His efforts have drawn criticism from artists and industry insiders who argue that AI-generated music threatens the integrity of human creativity.

K Fresh’s team is demanding a public apology and five specific actions within 24 hours, including proof that his music has been removed from Suno’s training data and a commitment to never use unlicensed music in future demos.

“This is your chance to do what is right. Meet these simple terms and we’ll consider the matter resolved. Refuse, and we’ll take every step necessary to ensure accountability.”

Suno and its competitor, Udio, are facing massive lawsuits from major labels and independent artists who accuse the companies of using copyrighted music without permission to train their AI models.

Sony, Universal, and Warner claim the startups copied thousands of songs—662 by Suno, 1,670 by Udio—with plaintiffs seeking damages up to \$150,000 per track.

Independent artists allege they’ve been exploited and excluded from settlement talks. While negotiations are underway, no cases have been resolved as of June 2025.