‘Wicked’ AI data scraping: Pullman calls for regulation to protect creative rights
Author Philip Pullman has called for urgent government action against AI firms scraping books and creative works without permission, calling the practice ‘wicked’.
Author Philip Pullman has publicly urged the UK government to intervene in what he describes as the ‘wicked’ practice of AI firms scraping authors’ works for training models. Pullman insists that writing is more than data, it is creative labour, and authors deserve protection.
Pullman’s intervention comes amid increasing concern in the literary community about how generative AI models are built using large volumes of existing texts, often without permission or clear compensation. He argues that uninhibited scraping undermines the rights of creators and could hollow out the foundations of culture.
He has called on UK policymakers to establish clearer rules and safeguards over how AI systems access, store, and reuse writers’ content. Pullman warns that without intervention, authors may lose control over their work, and the public could be deprived of authentic, quality literature.
His statement adds to growing pressure from writers, unions and rights bodies calling for better transparency, consent mechanisms and a balance between innovation and creator rights.
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