The Publishers Association - a trade organisation representing book, journal, and electronic publishers in the UK – has shared its immediate concerns and questions regarding the UK Government’s ongoing consultation on copyright and AI, which ends today.
AI developers are currently scraping copyrighted material to train their models without obtaining authorisation from rightsholders or providing any payment. As a result, the hard work and intellectual property of authors and publishers are being exploited without remuneration. Moreover, the lack of transparency means authors have no way of knowing whether their content has even been scraped, added the Association.
While the Government has stated that its consultation on AI and copyright represents a genuine effort to reach a compromise, the Publishers Association says it has several concerns and questions that need addressing.
A statement from Dan Conway, CEO of the Publishers Association, which includes an urgent message to the Government says: “The extraordinary strength of support shown in recent weeks for copyright and our world-class creative industries is something the Government ignores at its peril. When Booker, Grammy, Oscar, and Nobel prize winners are united in calling on the Government for a fair hearing, we have to hope they listen.
“Publishing is a growth industry supporting tens of thousands of highly skilled jobs nationwide. We already contribute £11 billion to the UK economy and are central to creative industries growth and UK research and development and are early adopters of AI technology to equip the readers and learners of the future.
“The message to government is clear: the great copyright heist cannot go unchallenged. Big Tech needs to pay for the creative and research content they hoover up to train AI, just as they pay for their electricity and other normal costs of running a legally compliant business. We urgently need transparency regulations to lift the lid on AI usage to ensure that the huge opportunities that AI can bring are realised in a way that incentivises growth across the whole economy and is safe and ethical for those who use it.
“The UK is a content superpower and its creative industries, educational institutions, and academic research is the envy of the world. Establishing fair trading practices and encouraging partnership with - rather than subservience to - Big Tech is the way we lift all the boats and deliver for the UK.”
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