B&TB&TB&T
  • Advertising
    • Campaigns of the Month
    • Effectiveness
    • League Tables
    • Opinion & Analysis
    • PR
    • Production & Craft
    • Social
    • Strategy & Insight
  • Agencies
    • Agency Scorecards
    • Appointments
    • Culture Bites
    • League Tables
    • New Business
    • Opinions & Analysis
    • Profiles
    • The Work
    • Fast 10
  • Awards
    • 30 Under 30
    • B&T Awards
    • Cairns Crocodiles Awards
    • Hatchlings
    • Women in Media
    • Women Leading Tech
  • Best of the Best
  • Brands
    • Appointments
    • Campaigns
    • Culture Bites
    • Opinions & Analysis
    • Partnerships
    • Spotlight on Sponsors
  • Campaigns
    • Campaigns of the Month
    • League Tables
    • Opinion & Analysis
    • The Work
  • CMOs
    • Appointments
    • CMO Power List
    • CMOs to Watch
    • Opinions & Analysis
  • Marketing
    • Appointments
    • Customer Experience
    • Data & Insights
    • Opinions & Analysis
    • Spotlight on Sponsorship
    • Strategy
    • Sports Marketing
  • Media
    • AI
    • Appointments
    • Audio
    • Digital
    • Headliners presented by Nine
    • News
    • News Media & Publishing
    • Opinions & Analysis
    • Out of Home
    • Platforms
    • Radio Ratings
    • Retail Media
    • Social
    • Spotlight on Sponsors
    • Streaming
    • Trading & Upfronts
    • TV Ratings
  • Technology
    • AdTech & MarTech
    • AI
    • Appointments
    • Opinions & Analysis
    • Platforms
  • Cairns Crocodiles
Search
Trending topics:
  • Featured
  • Cairns Crocodiles
  • B&T Agency Scorecards
  • Nine
  • ABC
  • SBS
  • Channel 10
  • Pinterest
  • channel 7
  • Channel 9
  • FIFA World Cup
  • Partner content
  • TikTok
  • WPP
  • ARN
  • Seven
  • Zenith
  • TV Ratings
  • Radio Ratings
  • Sports Marketing

  • About
  • Contact
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
© 2026 B&T. The Misfits Media Company Pty Ltd.
Reading: Government Must Stand Up To Global AI Giants
Share
Subscribe
B&TB&T
Subscribe
Search
  • Advertising
    • Campaign of the Month
    • Effectiveness
    • League Tables
    • Opinion & Analysis
    • PR
    • Production & Craft
    • Social
    • Strategy & Insight
  • Agencies
    • Agency Scorecards
    • Appointments
    • Culture Bites
    • League Tables
    • New Business
    • Opinions & Analysis
    • Profiles
    • The Work
    • Fast 10
  • Awards
    • 30 Under 30
    • B&T Awards
    • Cairns Crocodiles Awards
    • Hatchlings
    • Women in Media
    • Women Leading Tech
  • Best of the Best
  • Brands
    • Appointments
    • Campaigns
    • Culture Bites
    • Opinions & Analysis
    • Partnerships
    • Spotlight on Sponsors
  • Campaigns
    • Campaigns of the Month
    • League Tables
    • Opinion & Analysis
    • The Work
  • CMOs
    • Appointments
    • CMO Power List
    • CMOs to Watch
    • Opinions & Analysis
  • Marketing
    • Appointments
    • Customer Experience
    • Data & Insights
    • Opinions & Analysis
    • Spotlight on Sponsorship
    • Strategy
    • Fast 10
    • Sports Marketing
  • Media
    • AI
    • Appointments
    • Audio
    • Digital
    • Headliners presented by Nine
    • News
    • News Media & Publishing
    • Opinions & Analysis
    • Out of Home
    • Platforms
    • Radio Ratings
    • Social
    • Spotlight on Sponsors
    • Streaming
    • Trading & Upfronts
    • TV Ratings
    • Retail Media
  • Technology
    • AdTech & MarTech
    • AI
    • Appointments
    • Opinions & Analysis
    • Platforms
  • Cairns Crocodiles
Follow US
  • About
  • Contact
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
© 2026 B&T. The Misfits Media Company Pty Ltd.
B&T > Media > AI > Government Must Stand Up To Global AI Giants
AIMediaNews Media & PublishingOpinions & Analysis

Government Must Stand Up To Global AI Giants

Staff Writers
Published on: 15th July 2026 at 9:50 AM
Edited by Staff Writers
Share
3 Min Read
Paul Thomas.
SHARE

Australia’s copyright laws must not be rewritten at the urging of some of the world’s richest and most powerful technology companies, argues Star News Group managing director Paul Thomas.

When global AI giants lobby governments while simultaneously offering billions of dollars in investment, there is an obvious risk that the rights of Australian creators, publishers and journalists will be treated as an inconvenience to be negotiated away.

A report by Noah Yim in The Australian revealed that AI company Anthropic had sought “clarity” from Treasurer Jim Chalmers and other senior government figures on Australian copyright laws. According to the report, Anthropic argued that negotiating with the “long tail” of smaller rights holders could complicate its proposed investment in Australian AI infrastructure.

That argument should concern every Australian creator and publisher.

The difficulty of negotiating with thousands of smaller rights holders is not a reason to use their work without permission or payment. It is a reason for the government to urgently establish a collective licensing system that ensures creators are fairly compensated.

This is particularly critical for regional and local news media.

Local journalism is essential democratic infrastructure. It places reporters in council chambers, courts and community meetings. It exposes wrongdoing, tests claims made by politicians and institutions, and gives communities reliable information about the decisions affecting their lives.

That role is more important now than at any time in living memory.

Social media is awash with misinformation, deliberate lies, manipulated images, anonymous accusations and AI-generated content presented as fact.

Trusted local journalists provide something increasingly rare: information that has been gathered, checked and published by people and organisations that can be held accountable.

But quality journalism is expensive to produce and increasingly difficult to fund.

When AI companies use professionally produced reporting, photographs and other original content to build commercial products, that material is not simply free “data”. It is valuable intellectual property created through substantial investment.

Australia should welcome AI development and new technology infrastructure. But investment cannot become leverage to weaken copyright protections or avoid paying the people whose work helped create that value.

The government must act quickly to establish clear licensing rules, transparency over what content has been used, and fair compensation for both past and continuing use.

Without sustainable regional and local news media, communities lose scrutiny, accountability and one of their strongest defences against misinformation.

The principle should be simple: powerful global technology companies should not be permitted to profit from Australian creative work without fairly compensating the people and businesses that created it.

Paul Thomas is a life member of Country Press Australia, and the managing director of Star News Group.

Join more than 30,000 advertising industry experts
Get all the latest advertising and media news direct to your inbox from B&T.
Add B&T as a preferred source on Google

Related posts:

  1. Claude Owner Anthropic Invites All To Ask Hard Questions In New Work Via Mother London
  2. ‘Obvious Whitewash’: Prince Harry, Elton John & Elizabeth Hurley Lose Daily Mail Phone Hacking Case
  3. VC Fund Iona Star Invests In Zitcha To Drive AI Retail Media Expansion
  4. Glamour Australia Arrives, Skipping Print For TikTok & Instagram

TAGGED: Anthropic, Country Press Australia, Star News Group
Share
Arvind Hickman
By Arvind Hickman
Follow:
Arvind writes about anything to do with media, advertising and stuff. He is the former media editor of Campaign in London and has worked across several trade titles closer to home. Earlier in his career, Arvind covered business, crime, politics and sport. When he isn’t grilling media types, Arvind is a keen photographer, cook, traveller, podcast tragic and sports fanatic (in particular Liverpool FC). During his heyday as an athlete, Arvind captained the Epping Heights PS Tunnel Ball team and was widely feared on the star jumping circuit.

Latest News

Chloe Hooper’s The Limitless Equation Takes ‘Self-Doubt: The Invisible Pandemic’ Event National
15/07/2026
Gai Le Roy, Nicole Bence & Sian Whitnall Join UnLtd Board
15/07/2026
Michael Wretham-Brown Returns To Match & Wood As Chief Digital Officer
15/07/2026
Mediahub Names Kim Dolengowski As Head of Strategy As Linda Fagerlund Departs
15/07/2026
//

B&T is Australia’s leading news publication magazine for the advertising, marketing, media and PR industries.

 

B&T is owned by parent company The Misfits Media Company Pty Ltd.

About B&T

  • About
  • Contact
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise

Top Categories

  • Advertising
  • Campaigns
  • Marketing
  • Media
  • Opinions & Analysis
  • Technology

Sign Up for Our Newsletter



B&TB&T
Follow US
© 2026 B&T. The Misfits Media Company Pty Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Register Lost your password?