In a report on AI and copyright published today the House of
Lords Communications and Digital Committee has said that the
Government must choose between two AI futures.
Either the UK can become a ‘world-leading home for responsible,
licensing-based artificial intelligence development' or ‘drift'
towards acceptance of large-scale use of unlicensed creative
content by opaque US-based AI models, allowing damage to our
creative industries to go unchecked. Only the first path is in
the UK's interests.
The Committee says it would be a very ‘poor bet' for the
Government to allow changes to copyright that could undermine the
UK's creative industries, calling the sector an ‘economic
powerhouse'. The report highlights that the creative
industries—underpinned by the UK's ‘gold-standard' copyright
regime—contributed £124bn to the UK economy in 2023 and employed
2.4 million people. The AI sector contributed just £12bn in 2024
and employed 86,000 people.
The report is sceptical about tech industry claims that
introducing a new commercial text and data mining (TDM) exception
for AI training would significantly expand our AI sector. It is
clear, however, that weakening the UK's copyright law in this way
would exacerbate existing harms to rightsholders and stall the
emerging licensing market. The Committee calls on the Government
to develop a licensing-first regime, underpinned by robust
transparency, that safeguards creators' livelihoods while
supporting sustainable AI growth.
The Committee sets out a range of recommendations to
ensure the UK chooses the right path on AI and copyright. These
include:
-
Rule out a new commercial text and data (TDM) exception
with an opt-out model for AI training. The Government
was right to abandon its previous support for a new commercial
TDM exception and should now confirm that this will not be
introduced. The EU's ‘opt-out' approach does not provide a
workable model for the UK to follow. Australia's decision to
rule out a TDM exception shows a possible alternative way
forward.
-
Strengthen creators' rights by introducing protections
against unauthorised digital replicas and ‘in the style of' AI
outputs. These should give creators and performers
clear control over commercial exploitation of their identity.
-
Make transparency about AI training data a statutory
obligation. The Government should establish a clear
mandatory transparency framework for UK AI developers, as well
as considering how public procurement and regulatory tools
could promote compliance with UK transparency requirements by
international developers.
-
Create the conditions for a fair and inclusive UK
licensing market. A market for licensing content for
AI use is already emerging and, given its wealth of creative
content, the UK is well placed to benefit. The Government
should support this market to grow in a way that works for AI
developers and rightsholders of different sizes, rather than
relying on a single initiative such as the Creative Content
Exchange.
-
Prioritise the development and adoption of sovereign AI
models. Domestically governed AI systems can offer an
alternative to an overreliance on opaquely trained US-based
models. The Government's sovereign AI efforts should prioritise
the creation of models that deliver enhanced transparency and
respect for copyright as a default.
Commenting Committee Chair , said:
“Our creative industries face a clear and present danger from
uncredited and unremunerated use of copyrighted material to train
AI models. Photographers, musicians, authors and publishers are
seeing their work fed into AI models which then produce
imitations that take employment and earning opportunities from
the original creators.
“AI may contribute to our future economic growth, but the UK
creative industries create jobs and economic value now. In 2023
the creative industries delivered £124bn of economic value to the
UK and this is set to grow to £141bn by 2030. Watering down the
protections in our existing copyright regime to lure the biggest
US tech companies is a race to the bottom that does not serve UK
interests. We should not sacrifice our creative industries for AI
jam tomorrow.
“The Government should now make clear it will not pursue a new
text and data mining exception with an opt-out mechanism for
training commercial AI models. Instead, it should focus on
strengthening UK protections for creators, including against
unauthorised digital replicas and ‘in the style of' uses of
creators' work and identity. The Government's task should be to
create the conditions that will allow a licensing-first approach
to AI training to flourish, backed by effective transparency
requirements and technical standards for data provenance and
labelling, so that rightsholders and developers can participate
confidently in this emerging market.
“The future for AI in the UK should be based on transparent and
responsible use of training data. We are calling on the
Government to embrace the opportunities this presents, and to
demonstrate its commitment to the UK's gold-standard copyright
regime and our outstanding creative industries in its forthcoming
economic assessment and update on AI and copyright.”