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Deadlock looms in a battle between the government and peers over artists and their copyright. Sean O’Grady looks at who will blink first
S
trange to say but a government with a Commons majority of 156 is somehow in danger of losing one of its more important pieces of legislation.
The Data (Use and Access) Bill is commonly called the “data bill” or “AI bill” because it is central to the regulation of the new world of artificial intelligence; indeed, it is the first act of parliament specifically designed to deal with it. After breezing its way through the Commons, it has encountered unexpectedly stiff resistance in the House of Lords. Peers have five times rejected parts of the bill, and unless the government is prepared to compromise, the AI bill will have to be abandoned.









