(6 days, 16 hours ago)
Grand CommitteeThe noble Lord has enormous experience in these areas and will be particularly aware of the legal difficulties in enforcing rights. Given what he said, with which I entirely agree—indeed, I agree with all the speakers in supporting these amendments—and given the extraordinary expense of litigating to enforce rights, how does he envisage there being an adequate system to allow those who have had their data scraped in the way that he describes to obtain redress or, rather, suitable remedies?
I thank the noble Lord for that. He is anticipating a paragraph in my notes, which says that, although it is not set out in the amendments, robust enforcement of these provisions will be critical to their success. This includes oversight from an expert regulator that is empowered to issue significant penalties, including fines for non-compliance. There is a little extra work to do there, and I would very much like to see the Intellectual Property Office gain some teeth.
I am going to close. We are nearly at the witching hour, but it is clear that AI developers are seeking to use their lobbying clout—the noble Baroness, Lady Kidron, mentioned the Kool-Aid—to persuade the Government that new copyright law is required. Instead, this amendment would clarify that UK copyright law applies to gen AI developers. The creative industries, and noble Lords from across the House as their supporters, will rally around these amendments and vigorously oppose government plans for a new text and data- mining exception.