28 October 2025

As policy ideas go, exempting AI from copyright laws was a cruel shocker

| By Chris Johnson
Join the conversation
8

Holly Rankin delivered the fifth Speaker’s Lecture at Parliament House on Monday. Photo: Speaker’s Facebook.

Singer-songwriter Holly Rankin, who performs under the name of Jack River, was in Parliament House on Monday (27 October) to deliver the annual Speaker’s lecture.

The address itself was quite powerful and to the point, basically telling politicians to be more real if they want to connect to everyday Australians (especially young people) and regain their trust.

After the lecture, however, when commenting about the Federal Government’s announcement the same day that it won’t allow tech giants to freely harvest Australian content for AI, Ms Rankin put it in a nutshell.

She said what all Australian authors, artists and content creators of all descriptions were thinking – and a sentiment shared by most Australians.

“For it to even be a question was a shock for us,” she said.

That the government was in fact considering a proposal to allow artificial intelligence trainers from international technology firms to use Australians’ work for their commercial gain, without paying the local creators, was a shock indeed.

Compounding that shock to the point of being horrific was that the very idea that AI should be exempted from Australia’s copyright laws was being pushed by the Productivity Commission.

In a report to the government in the lead-up to August’s productivity roundtable, the Australian Productivity Commission cautioned against a heavy-handed approach to regulating the use of AI.

READ ALSO Government says no to exempting AI from Australian copyright laws

In that report, it floated the idea of a text-and-data-mining exemption to the Copyright Act.

Such an exemption would open the door for AI trainers and platforms to legally exploit “fair dealing” on copyrighted Australian work.

That’s correct: an Australian Government body was advising the Australian Government to let tech giants from all corners of the globe rip off Australian work.

It would have made more sense if it were a plan promulgated in Donald Trump’s America, where the value of art and culture is being crushed at an ever-faster pace.

The idea seemed to catch Labor off guard, with ministers from the very top down unsure how to respond at first.

There was a lot of double-speak about the opportunities AI offers the economy, amid mumblings about commitments to also look after the artistic sector.

The Productivity Commission appeared to place no value on the work of authors, journalists, musicians and artists – including the creators of Indigenous and cultural art.

Fortunately, the arts sector rallied to protect the work itself, bringing the campaign to Canberra and telling policymakers that their work indeed had value.

The union movement mobilised as well. This was about protecting Australian work and jobs.

Even the Opposition was demanding guardrails to protect local work being exploited by international conglomerates.

READ ALSO Banks not responding to customer concerns quick enough, says financial ombudsman

A Senate inquiry into the brainwave has revealed the Commission had conducted no economic modelling on how its proposed changes to copyright law would affect Australia’s creative sector.

That prompted Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young to accuse the PC of a blatant disregard for the value of the arts to Australian society and economy.

“I am gobsmacked that the Productivity Commission issued their interim report in August without consulting all of the appropriate industries and bodies and without doing their homework,” she said.

“You consulted with MasterCard, Microsoft, Meta, OpenAI, Xero, Deloitte, you consulted with a lot of other players, but you didn’t consult with the creative industries.”

So amid all the political outcry, the parliamentary inquiry, and the earnest lobbying, a collective sigh of relief was had on Monday when Attorney-General Michelle Rowland acknowledged the value of creative work.

She ruled out a text-and-data-mining exception to the Copyright Act for AI.

“Australian creatives are not only world-class, but they are also the lifeblood of Australian culture,” she said.

“And we must ensure the right legal protections are in place.”

Ms Rankin, who had given evidence to the Senate inquiry last month, described Monday’s announcement as an “incredibly significant” decision on the part of the government.

“It means the government is saying creatives and artists should be paid for their work, and it should be licensed correctly in the age of AI,” she said.

Amen to all of that, and now to keep the government to its word.

But everyone is still reeling from the fact that the idea was even being seriously considered in the first place.

Free Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? We package the most-read Canberra stories and send them to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.
Loading
By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.

Join the conversation

8
All Comments
  • All Comments
  • Website Comments
LatestOldest

It should never had been entertained and the plea from Tech Companies should have been immediately dismissed. How the Productivity Commission supported it without reference to the creative community requires detailed answers and pursuit by journos. Heads may need to roll. As an author I would have gone to the High Court as the Commonwealth Government had pursued the Tech line then it would have acquired property (copyright without just terms). However your analysis as to how it was being entertained at all merits the new AG fronting and explaining why???

So the Productivity Commission consulted with the biggest, greediest for profit organisations but not with those who’d be supplying the information for AI? What happened to consulting with all stakeholders to get various perspectives on an issue and to make sure all involved were able to inform decision-makers?

Too often consultation leaves out those most affected by the decisions being made. Surely it’s time that proper research was done? Thank goodness that in this case the decision-makers were forced to confront the issues before the decisions were made.

So, the pseudo creative artlessness of the modern (left-wing) era hangs on by the skin of its teeth. But that won’t last forever, as all imitations absolutely only have a limited span, and will quite aptly be swallowed up by AI – AI basically being the spirit it was channelling all along.

Creativity isn’t about self-expression, but about expressing that which is beyond self, and it has to be this way because art isn’t mental but is from the heart, and you don’t get proper access to that by being selfish – yet that’s all the Left has ever been, hence the Unparalleled ugliness in everything it’s ever produced.

Compare: Bach and the old architecture and the sense of community from the past to snoop bog and the glass skyscraper and everyone squirreled away behind a computer at home. Only the most obstinate fool would even think of rationalising where we are.

AI, as monstrous as it’s going to be, is still all that the Left deserves for its troubles, and until the Hollys of this world are committed to bringing about a counter-cultural revolution, their yearning for something more beautiful an meaningful will go wildly unfulfilled.

Just look at the young ones today, in particular. They’ve basically known nothing but left-wing degeneracy their whole lives and now they’re the ones crying out the loudest for connection, grasping desperately at almost anything – no matter how stupid – which promises it. And that’s because the Left made a promise that it hasn’t been able to keep and the young ones are now grossly disconnected from everything, beginning with their heart.

This sounds great but it made me realise I have no idea how AI works. I always thought AI was an independent Artificial Intelligence that was capable of creating its own ‘artwork’, therefore wouldn’t need to copy the works of a human artist. Clearly I have a lot to learn about this.

AI LLMs today are regurgitators of plausibilities.

Expert systems, Bayesian modelling techniqes, and other specialities are quite useful. Unfortunately they are now caught up under the “AI” rubric just like in the 80s it was all “-tronic”, in ’90s everything was “e-” and after the iPhone it was all “i-“. Now it is “AI”. Keep your eye on what is actually useful within.

Well, where would the AI gather its ideas from if not the real world? How would it create Aboriginal Australian art without first looking at existing art to understand? There is a saying “to steal like an artist” that is to say that mostly all creative work is derivative in nature but not so obvious. The difference is that in most cases, if an artist is deriving their work from yours, chances are they have bought your works to reference. AI on the other hand is referencing without buying a copy, without attribution.

No it learns from Humans by search the internet. It has major flaws at the moment and should be used with caution. I ran my SMSF investments through ChatGPT for an opinion and it confused my investments in Defence industries to being Defensive investments. Gave me laugh and let me know how far it has to go.

Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? Every day we package the most popular Region Canberra stories and send them straight to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.