Article cover image: ALCS joins Creative Rights in AI Coalition

ALCS joins Creative Rights in AI Coalition

The Creative Rights in AI Coalition (CRAIC), a new coalition of rightsholders, are calling on the Government to protect copyright ahead of the imminent launch of its consultation on AI.

ALCS is proud to join rightsholders and our partners in the creative industries as we work to ensure that the development of AI does not impede on the essential principles of copyright.

In a statement, the coalition said: “The UK’s world-leading creative and tech sectors put it in a unique position to set a global standard for how both sectors can innovate together and continue to provide high quality services. Protecting copyright and building a dynamic licensing market for the use of creative content in building generative AI (GAI) isn’t just a question of fairness: it’s the only way that both sectors will flourish and grow.

Retaining the UK’s gold standard copyright protections – and ensuring the law is enforceable and respected in the face of the challenges posed by GAI – will create incentives for GAI developers to enter into licence agreements with rightsholders, ensuring a steady flow of quality, human-authored works for GAI training. Without proper control and remuneration for creators, investment in high-quality content will fall. GAI innovation will inevitably stall, and value will drain from both the tech and creative industries which contribute so much to the UK economy and quality of life.

Instead, the Government has a golden opportunity to drive growth in both the creative and tech sectors. We must ensure the onus will be on GAI firms to seek permission and engage with rightsholders to agree licences: just as tech firms are content to pay for the huge quantity of electricity that powers their data centres, they must be content to pay for the high-quality copyright-protected works which are essential to train and ground accurate GAI models.”

CRAIC has published three key principles to ensure copyright is protected as Government policy on generative AI takes shape. These are:

IP and a dynamic licensing market: UK copyright law grants intellectual property owners, including tech companies, exclusive rights over their works, which includes control over the granting of a licence for uses of those works. Copyright protected works are a valuable resource for building and operationalising generative AI tools, products and services. Despite acknowledging this value, generative AI developers have largely exploited such content without permission, ignoring copyright protections and clear reservations of rights. A mutually beneficial, dynamic licensing market is feasible and desirable but can only flourish if there is respect for copyright, underwritten by robust mechanisms to ensure accountability and compliance.

Transparency: The Government should focus on solutions which ensure the Creative Industries can meaningfully exercise their exclusive rights, including if and how their copyrighted content can be collected and used by generative AI developers. Transparency is therefore essential in supporting accountability for copyright infringement and must be designed to incentivise compliance with copyright law, fostering a mutually beneficial partnership between generative AI developers and the Creative Industries.

Growth and innovation: The UK Creative Industries are an economic powerhouse with huge growth potential, as well as wielding immense cultural and soft power significance. A dynamic content licensing market, underpinned by robust copyright protections, will drive growth and innovation in the Creative Industries and generate value for society and the UK economy at large. This is also essential for future growth in the generative AI sector, which is reliant on a sustainable supply of high-quality, human-authored copyright works, without which it risks collapse.


You can learn more about CRAIC and read the statement in full here.

You can learn more about our campaigning work on AI here.