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UK Data (Use and Access) Bill jeopardised by Lords AI-copyright amendment, raising risks to UK GDPR reforms and EU data adequacy; Commons showdown and possible Parliament Acts route ahead

Published on: 09 June 2025

Published by an LexisNexis Information Law expert
Legal News
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It marks the fifth bid by the House of Lords to harness the Data (Use and Access) Bill to shield the creative sectors, taken despite ministers urging the upper revising chamber to step aside. Though the government is almost certain to strip out the amendment when the Bill returns to the House of Commons, where it commands a substantial majority, the mounting stand-off between both houses endangers the Bill’s prospects, with consequences for UK data protection law and the nation’s EU data adequacy standing. The Data (Use and Access) Bill is a post-Brexit initiative to adjust elements of the United Kingdom General Data Protection Regulation, Assimilated Regulation (EU) 2016/679, carried over from EU membership. The Bill is already on its third version, having been tabled and then heavily reworked by the previous Conservative administration, then brought back by the Labour government that took office in July 2024. It has stalled at the closing phase of scrutiny, and any further delay, or the possibility of ministers dropping it in response to the Lords’ persistent moves to deploy it to secure AI copyright safeguards across the sector, raising concerns about timelines and outcomes and wider regulatory certainty, for the Bill, will have...

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