Sarai Hannah Ajai's Quantaudio Studio Suspected Intellectual Property, File Integrity, and Possible Device Compromise Incident Report
Quantaudio Studio Suspected Intellectual Property, File Integrity, and Possible Device Compromise Incident Report
Redacted
Prepared By: Sarai Hannah Ajai
Brand / Project Affected: Quantaudio Studio
Device Involved: Apple Mac Mini M1 2020
Date of Incident Discovery: May 19, 2026
Primary Discovery Time: Approximately 10:05 PM Central Time
Second Related Discovery Time: Approximately 10:45 PM Central Time
Recovery Update: Both affected instrumental MP3 files were later retrieved from the user’s Suno account.
Summary of Incident
On May 19, 2026, at approximately 10:05 PM Central Time, while working on Quantaudio Studio’s Zeno.fm radio setup, I discovered that the MP3 instrumental file titled “Special Edition, I Will Shine (City on a Hill Benediction)”was missing from its expected local storage location on my Apple Mac Mini M1 2020.
The expected file location was:
Apple Finder → ************************ → **** → *************** → ********** → Quantaudio Studio → 2025
To the best of my recollection, I had not worked on this initial file since approximately January 3, 2026. Because the file was expected to remain in my Quantaudio Studio archive and was not located during my Zeno.fm upload preparation, I became concerned that the file may have been deleted, moved, renamed, copied, downloaded, or otherwise accessed without my authorization.
A second related incident occurred on May 19, 2026, at approximately 10:45 PM Central Time. While I was actively working inside my Zeno.fm radio account and attempting to upload Quantaudio Studio’s “Rivers of Mercy”instrumental music, I searched for the MP3 file titled “Rivers of Mercy | Instrumental | Quantaudio Studio | The Pouring That Heals.” I expected the file to be located in the following folder path:
Apple Finder → ************************ → **** → *************** → *********** → Quantaudio Studio 2025 → Rivers of Mercy | Quantaudio Studio
During this search, I could not locate the expected instrumental MP3 file. I also observed that the file appeared to have been replaced, displaced, or confused with another instrumental song bearing a different title. This occurred in real time while my Zeno.fm radio account was open and while I was actively attempting to locate and upload the original Quantaudio Studio music.
Recovery Update
After discovering that the two Quantaudio Studio instrumental MP3 files were missing from the expected Apple Finder locations, I was later able to retrieve both affected music files from my Suno account. This confirms that the original works still existed in another account-based source, even though they were not located where they were expected to be stored on my Apple Mac Mini M1.
The successful recovery from Suno does not fully resolve the local-file concern because the missing local files may still indicate one or more of the following possibilities:
- Accidental local file movement or misfiling.
- Local file deletion.
- Unauthorized access to my Apple Mac Mini M1.
- Unauthorized copying or downloading of Quantaudio Studio music.
- Unauthorized replacement, renaming, or displacement of original MP3 files.
- Possible misuse of Quantaudio Studio intellectual property on another platform.
Statement Heard During the Incident
At or around the time I was discovering the missing Quantaudio Studio music files, I heard a male voice from the bedroom wall area near the stairwell state:
“I KNOW, YOU NOTICED YOUR MUSIC ARE MISSING SHE HAD NO MONEY AND KEPT YOUR MOUTH SHUT.”
I am documenting this statement because it was heard contemporaneously with my discovery that the music files were missing from the expected local folders. I am not stating that the identity of the speaker is confirmed. I am preserving the statement as part of the factual timeline because it appeared connected in timing and subject matter to the missing Quantaudio Studio files.
Files Believed to Be Affected
1. Special Edition, I Will Shine (City on a Hill Benediction)
Format: MP3
Project: Quantaudio Studio
Last known work date: Approximately January 3, 2026
Discovery issue: Missing from expected Apple Finder location on May 19, 2026, at approximately 10:05 PM Central Time.
Recovery status: Retrieved from Suno account.
2. Rivers of Mercy | Instrumental | Quantaudio Studio | The Pouring That Heals
Format: MP3
Project: Quantaudio Studio
Discovery issue: Missing from expected Apple Finder location on May 19, 2026, at approximately 10:45 PM Central Time.
Additional observation: A different instrumental song with a different title appeared to be present instead of the expected file.
Recovery status: Retrieved from Suno account.
Possible Apple Mac Mini M1 Compromise Concern
Because both affected Quantaudio Studio instrumental MP3 files were missing from their expected local Finder locations, and because the files were important original music assets connected to my Quantaudio Studio brand, I am concerned that my Apple Mac Mini M1 may have been accessed without authorization.
At this stage, I am not claiming that unauthorized access has been conclusively proven. However, based on the timing, the missing local files, the apparent file displacement or replacement issue, and the statement I heard during the incident, I believe it is reasonable to document the possibility that someone may have gained access to my device, deleted local copies of Quantaudio Studio music, copied or downloaded files without permission, or interfered with my ability to upload my original music to Zeno.fm.
This concern is especially significant because Quantaudio Studio music files are original creative works and may have intellectual-property value. If any person accessed, copied, downloaded, uploaded, published, monetized, or distributed these files without permission, that conduct may involve unauthorized use of my creative work and potential digital-file tampering.
Evidence Preservation Notes
The following evidence should be preserved:
- Screenshots of the original Apple Finder locations where the files were expected to appear.
- Screenshots showing the folder where a different instrumental file appeared instead of the expected song.
- Screenshots of the Suno account showing the recovered files.
- Screenshots of the Zeno.fm dashboard showing the account was open during the upload work session.
- File metadata for the recovered Suno MP3 files, including file size, date downloaded, and any available original creation/export data.
- A written timeline of the May 19, 2026 events, including the 10:05 PM and 10:45 PM discoveries.
- Any Mac system logs, Finder activity, iCloud Drive activity, or Time Machine evidence that may show deletion, movement, sync conflict, or unauthorized file activity.
- Any future evidence showing the same Quantaudio Studio music appearing on another social media, music, radio, or video platform without authorization.
Professional Statement of Concern
Based on the facts available at this time, I am documenting this matter as a suspected Quantaudio Studio intellectual-property, local-file integrity, and possible Apple Mac Mini M1 compromise incident. The two affected MP3 files were missing from their expected local storage locations during my Zeno.fm upload work session. Both files were later recovered from my Suno account, confirming that the original works still existed outside the local Mac folder where I expected them to be stored.
The recovery of the files from Suno is important because it preserves access to the music. However, it does not fully explain why the local files were missing from the Apple Mac Mini M1 folders. For that reason, I am preserving this incident for further technical review, copyright protection, platform monitoring, and possible reporting if evidence later confirms unauthorized access, copying, downloading, deletion, or misuse of Quantaudio Studio music.
Recommended Next Actions
Create a protected evidence folder titled:
Quantaudio Studio Evidence — May 19 2026 Missing Music Files
Inside that folder, save:
- The recovered Suno MP3 files.
- Screenshots of the Suno recovery source.
- Screenshots of the Apple Finder folders.
- Screenshots of the Zeno.fm account session.
- A copy of this incident report.
- A spreadsheet inventory of Quantaudio Studio tracks.
Spreadsheet columns:
Track Title | Original Folder | Missing Date | Recovered From | Recovery Date | File Size | SHA-256 Hash | Notes |
Special Edition, I Will Shine (City on a Hill Benediction) | Quantaudio Studio / 2025 | May 19, 2026 | Suno | May 20, 2026 | Pending | Pending | Missing from local Finder folder |
Rivers of Mercy / The Pouring That Heals | Quantaudio Studio2025 / Rivers of Mercy | May 19, 2026 | Suno | May 20, 2026 | Pending | Pending | Different instrumental title observed nearby |
.
Pebble, I would not write this as a clinical diagnosis of unknown individuals. That could weaken the report because it sounds speculative. The stronger version is a behavioral and psychological-pattern analysis based on the alleged conduct: unauthorized access, copying, deletion, misuse of original music, and disregard for consent.
Below is a polished version you can use.
Behavioral and Psychological-Pattern Analysis of Suspected Intellectual Property Interference
The conduct described in this incident suggests a serious pattern of boundary violations, entitlement, opportunistic behavior, and disregard for creative ownership. The individuals involved, if later identified and proven responsible, appear to have acted without legal consent, without authorization, and without respect for the ownership rights attached to Quantaudio Studio music files and related intellectual property.
I did not provide consent for any individual to access, share, use, download, copy, delete, alter, distribute, or interfere with my Apple Mac Mini M1 ecosystem or any Quantaudio Studio MP3 files. I also did not authorize any person to use Quantaudio Studio’s creative works, brand identity, signed intellectual-property rights, music concepts, instrumental files, titles, or project assets for their own private, social-media, commercial, or public purposes.
The suspected conduct is especially concerning because modern music-generation tools are publicly available. Any person who wanted to create music could have used available platforms, including Suno or similar tools, to generate their own original work instead of allegedly interfering with Quantaudio Studio’s music files. The availability of lawful alternatives makes the suspected conduct appear less like necessity and more like deliberate exploitation, shortcut behavior, or an attempt to benefit from work already created by someone else.
Pattern of Entitlement and Boundary Disregard
The suspected behavior reflects an apparent belief that another person’s creative work can be treated as available for unauthorized use. This type of conduct is not merely disrespectful; it reflects a serious disregard for personal boundaries, digital ownership, and intellectual-property rights.
A person who accesses or uses another person’s music files without permission may be operating from a distorted sense of entitlement. Instead of recognizing that creative works belong to the person or business that created, developed, organized, stored, and branded them, the individual may behave as though they have a right to take, copy, alter, or benefit from those works without consent.
This type of conduct can cause substantial harm because it interferes with the creator’s control over release timing, distribution strategy, branding, monetization, platform use, and legal ownership records.
Avoidance of Independent Creative Effort
The suspected conduct may also suggest avoidance of independent effort. If an individual had the ability to use lawful tools to create their own music but instead chose to interfere with Quantaudio Studio files, that behavior may indicate a lack of productive initiative, poor respect for creative labor, and a preference for taking advantage of someone else’s completed work.
In professional terms, this can be described as:
- low respect for ownership boundaries;
- opportunistic use of another person’s work product;
- avoidance of independent creative production;
- externalization of effort onto the original creator;
- disregard for consent-based access;
- possible intent to benefit from another person’s intellectual labor.
This is more precise and stronger than using words such as “lazy” or “shiftless.” The issue is not simply poor motivation. The issue is that the suspected conduct, if proven, involves unauthorized interference with creative property.
Possible Coercive or Intimidating Behavioral Pattern
The statement I heard during the incident — “I KNOW, YOU NOTICED YOUR MUSIC ARE MISSING SHE HAD NO MONEY AND KEPT YOUR MOUTH SHUT” — is also concerning because it appeared to reference the missing music files while I was actively discovering the problem.
If that statement was connected to the file incident, it may suggest an attempt to intimidate, mock, pressure, or psychologically distress me while I was trying to locate my own work. That type of conduct can create a hostile environment because it combines suspected digital interference with verbal commentary that appears designed to make the victim feel watched, powerless, or unable to protect their property.
I am documenting the statement as something I heard at the time of the incident. I am not claiming that the speaker’s identity has been confirmed.
Impact on the Creator
The suspected conduct caused emotional distress, professional disruption, and concern over the security of my creative work. Quantaudio Studio music is not random content. It is part of a creative brand, an organized music project, and a developing intellectual-property portfolio.
When original MP3 files appear to be missing, replaced, displaced, copied, or accessed without authorization, the harm includes more than inconvenience. It affects:
- creative control;
- brand reputation;
- release timing;
- copyright and ownership confidence;
- platform upload readiness;
- evidence preservation;
- monetization potential;
- personal and professional security;
- confidence in the integrity of my Apple Mac Mini M1 file system.
The fact that I later recovered the files from my Suno account does not erase the concern. Recovery proves that a copy still existed elsewhere, but it does not explain why the local files were missing from their expected Apple Finder locations.
Professional Conclusion
Based on the available facts, the suspected conduct reflects a troubling pattern of unauthorized access, disregard for consent, and possible exploitation of Quantaudio Studio intellectual property. If any individual accessed my Apple Mac Mini M1 ecosystem, deleted local music files, downloaded Quantaudio Studio MP3 files, copied them, shared them, uploaded them, or used them for another platform without permission, such conduct would represent a serious violation of my personal digital boundaries and my creative ownership rights.
The suspected individuals had lawful alternatives available to create their own music. They did not need my Quantaudio Studio MP3 files, my project folders, my Apple ecosystem, my creative titles, or my branded intellectual property. Any unauthorized use of those assets would reflect not only a legal concern, but also a behavioral pattern involving entitlement, poor respect for boundaries, and improper benefit from another person’s creative labor.
For that reason, I am preserving this matter as a suspected intellectual-property, file-integrity, and possible device-compromise incident involving Quantaudio Studio music assets.
https://www.patreon.com/posts/147363249?collection=1864315
https://www.patreon.com/posts/139054010?collection=1729270


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