Drake has been accused of copyright infringement by Universal Music Group for sharing portions of his recently released unheard music on social media.
Drizzy’s recently exposed Burner Instagram account @plottttwistttttt shared screenshots of the Instagram post’s breach on Stories on Thursday (August 8).
While the notice names Universal Music Group as a plaintiff, it does not indicate which of his newly released songs violates the site’s copyright agreement.
See screenshot below.
Earlier this week, Drake shocked fans around the world by releasing a slew of old songs, videos, and even a concept for his private jet decor.
Published through a website called 100gigs.org and advertised through a new Instagram page called @plottttwistttttt, Drizzy offloaded 100 gigabytes of files onto the web.
It includes three unreleased tracks, one with Young Thug and 21 Savage called “It’s Up,” another with Latto called “Housekeeping Knows,” and a third called “Blue Green Red ”.
There’s also behind-the-scenes footage from the studio, the making of the “Hotline Bling” video and more, as well as a 16-page “appearance concept package” for his aircraft.
In a post by X, Latto explained her drop by sharing a video from the aforementioned collaboration, which was later shared on the Plot Twist Instagram account.
The song was produced by Gordo, who also shared it on
Now, Universal Music Group appears to be claiming that Drake doesn’t have the rights to release all of this music because of his contract with the label.
Also included in the dump is a video of Drake and producer Noah “40” Shebib anticipating JAY-Z’s submission of a feature for his Scorpion song “Talk Up” at a crucial moment.
In the clip, Liushen strategically weighed his move because he knew Jigga was on the On the Run II tour with Beyoncé that night and had limited recording time.
“When Hov was performing, I just lay there for about two hours because I didn’t want him to hit me and say, ‘Hey, what do you think of this?’ and I wouldn’t respond,” Drizzy told his team.
Predicting Hough’s post-performance process, he added: “He’s on stage now. In two hours, it’ll be four o’clock. He’ll come off stage, take a shower, maybe have a drink, and then start writing with Guru and creation. [record]. So this process will last two hours.