The Committee on Legal Affairs, with the support of the Policy Department for Justice, Civil Liberties and Institutional Affairs, organised a Workshop “Generative AI and copyright”. The event took place on 4 June 2025, from 9:00 to 10:45 at the European Parliament. EWC was invited to speak and present its position onto Authors Rights related to advanced technologies, together with nine cultural federations and represented by EWC’s Commissioner for Political Affairs, the novelist Ms. Nina George.
On behalf of the European Writers’ Council (EWC), Nina George delivered the following key position, following the resolution by the EWC’s 53 member organisations at its Annual General Meeting in Oslo, 2025:
We are deeply concerned by the exploitation of billions of our labour hours and of protected works by non European AI companies for generative text models, like the illegal usage of 7,5 million books and 81 million scientific papers via the piracy website Library Genesis.
We express our deep dismay that these severe violations are not acknowledged by decisionmakers nor politically debated on European level.
Without our work, our private financial investment, research and risks, none of the so-called innovative generative models would exist.
Therefore, we demand: Hold the exploiters accountable, demand full information about every title used, and make them pay for the unauthorised abuse.
Stop playing copyright and innovation off against each other. It is not our rights that are the problem, but the reluctance to pay for the use of our work. Technical development and profit must not be at the expense of authors and artists. Accordingly, the AI Act, its Guidelines and Code of Practice, must be implemented without stop clocks to protect Europe’s intellectual resources.
Preserve Europe’s sovereignty and digital independence and remain committed to AI regulation that focus on people negatively affected.
Revamp the TDM exception, as it does not cover generative development at all, as Professor Lucchi rightly pointed out, measure the harm done to us, and get remedy ready.
Do not impose any mandatory or statutory licensing on us, because to say _no_ to the sell-out of a lifetime work is our foremost position. And a fair warning: any license would exceed five digits. We know what we are worth.
We urge you: stand firmly by the principle of ART: authorisation – remuneration – transparency. Thank you, Mr. Chair.”
The JURI own-initiative report (2025/2058(INI) is expected in mid June 2025, and open for amendments until mid September.