Netizens slammed Drake for using modern technology to his advantage in making a Kendrick Lamar diss track.

Last weekend, the "One Dance" artist dropped a new track aimed at dissing Lamar and titled it "Taylor Made Freestyle." He posted the audio track on Instagram and X and has since gained over 44.7 million views and 13.2 million views on the platforms, respectively.

The track featured the voice of Tupac rapping, "Kendrick, we need ya, the West Coast savior," as if pleading with Lamar to respond to Drake's diss track titled "Push Ups," according to XXL.

Tupac Amaru Shakur, known by the stage names 2Pac and Makaveli, died in September 1996 at age 25.

The "All Eyez on Me" artist died six days after he was shot four times by a gunman at a stoplight in Las Vegas on Sept. 13, 1996.

The use of AI to mimic Tupac's voice in Drake's diss track for Lamar did not sit well with fans and the netizens, and many called out Drizzy on social media.

"I can't believe you all [are] OK with the Canadian rapper using an AI Tupac. Manipulating the deceased's voice with your own words for beef is the corniest s**t I have ever seen. [Not gonna lie], Tupac would have hated Drake," tweeted one netizen.

"Not only is it trash but it's disgusting and disrespectful to Pac. You new dudes [are] something else," said a different commenter.

"Drake using AI Tupac is cringe and corny and disrespectful to Tupac. [Get the f**k out]," opined another.

"This is goofy, corny and lame," stated a different netizen.

"Let Tupac rest in peace," wrote someone else.

Meanwhile, some found Drake's use of AI "innovative."

"Drake just dropped a diss track using Tupac and Snoop Dogg's AI vocals. This is brilliant, innovative and hilarious," commented one netizen.

"Man, how did you even think of doing this? Incredible!" Kenny Hamilton responded on his Instagram post.

"The greatest," wrote B. Simone.

"Wow! Genius!" rapper and entrepreneur Berner commented.

"The greatest of all time. End of story," someone else stated.

The feud between the two artists reportedly started when Drake and J. Cole released "First Person Shooter."

In the track, the two rap, "Love when they argue the hardest MC / Is it K. Dot? Is It Aubrey? Or me? / We big three, like we started a league."

However, Lamar shut down the claim that they were the big three in the hip-hop scene in his verse on Metro Boomin and Future's "Like That," rapping: "Motherf**k the big three, n***a, it's just big me."

Tags
Drake, Kendrick lamar, Rap, Rappers, Tupac, AI, Diss track