Tech & Gadgets

Copyright and AI in Britain: the balancing act

It’s no secret that copyrighted creative works (including newspaper articles, novels, music, and images) are used to train generative AI models. The issues are complex, but the battle lines are clearly drawn. Creatives are lobbying governments to protect their rights, in what many see as an existential threat to the future of creativity itself. The widely publicized Declaration on AI Training, with more than 30,000 signatories, including high-profile writers, actors and academics, has brought growing public attention to creators’ perspectives on this topic.

On the other hand, AI companies are pushing for maximum freedoms so that algorithms can train on existing material to “turbocharge” innovation. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella compared AI training to learning a subject from a textbook, arguing that companies should be given free rights to data to train their models. Like many other countries, the British government is in the spotlight as it tries to see how it can reconcile the competing interests of groups seeking to shape the legislation governing this rapidly developing region.

Rajvinder Jagdev

Partner at Powell Gilbert.

What is the current British position?

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