UK Lords Demand AI Limits to Protect Creative Jobs
A House of Lords committee is urging the UK government to impose stricter limits on how AI companies use copyrighted material, arguing that the country should not trade away its creative industries for uncertain AI gains.
The warning comes from a new report that puts copyright, transparency, and licensing at the center of the UK’s AI debate, as pressure grows on governments to decide how generative AI should be trained on books, music, journalism, and other creative work.
The committee’s central argument is narrower and more consequential: this is not a call to slow AI across the board. It is a call to avoid weakening copyright law in ways that could damage creators while delivering unclear economic benefits in return.
The peers also frame the issue as an economic one, not just a cultural fight. In their view, the UK already has a valuable creative sector with established legal protections, and any rewrite of copyright rules should not casually undercut that foundation in pursuit of promised AI growth.
Lords reject a weaker copyright approach
In its report, the House of Lords Communications and Digital Committee said the UK’s creative industries contributed £124 billion to the economy in 2023 and warned that it would be “a poor bet” to sacrifice that strength for “speculative AI gains.” The committee said the government should rule out a new commercial text and data mining exception with an opt-out model, make AI training data transparency a statutory obligation, and create stronger protections against unauthorized digital replicas and harmful “in the style of” outputs.
The report also argues that a licensing-first system would better serve both creators and responsible AI development. Rather than opening the door to broad unlicensed training, the peers want the government to help build a fairer market for licensing creative works for AI use.
Pressure builds on the government’s next move
This matters because the government is still shaping its long-term approach. A UK government consultation on copyright and AI ran from December 17, 2024, to February 25, 2025, and a later progress report said the government plans to publish its report and economic impact assessment by March 18, 2026.
That leaves ministers with a narrowing window to respond to growing pushback from creators, publishers, and lawmakers. The Lords committee is effectively telling the government that the UK does not need to choose between creative work and AI innovation, but it does need clearer rules, better transparency, and a model that pays for the content AI systems use.
Also read: The UK government’s earlier copyright setback shows how strongly creators have pushed back against AI training on protected work.
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