CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA / RankWire.AI / – Australian creators are pressing for a direct role in the federal government’s new Office of AI. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese launched the body on July 15 as part of Australia’s national artificial intelligence framework. The office will coordinate policy on copyright, infrastructure, consumer safety, employment, education and national security. Artists and rights groups welcomed the initiative while seeking formal input into decisions that affect creative work.

Creators seek a formal voice as Australia develops national artificial intelligence rules.
The Australian Recording Industry Association said musicians and other creators should help guide the office’s copyright work. Chief executive Annabelle Herd noted that generative AI systems rely on music, books, journalism, film and visual art. Australian law allows developers to use protected material when they secure permission from copyright owners. Herd also called for clearer enforcement tools and a simpler process for creators pursuing smaller claims.
The government said writers, artists and journalists must control how companies use their work for artificial intelligence training. It also confirmed that existing copyright ownership would remain central to the new framework. However, officials did not announce a licensing system or a payment structure for protected content. The government also has not confirmed formal seats for creators, publishers or rights holders within the Office of AI.
Creative sector seeks formal safeguards
APRA AMCOS supported the new office and urged policymakers to adopt licensing based on consent and payment. The organisation represents songwriters, composers and music publishers in Australia and New Zealand. Chief executive Dean Ormston also called for protection of Indigenous cultural and intellectual property. Earlier in July, artists, authors and industry groups visited Canberra to defend existing copyright rules and seek direct engagement on AI policy.
Anthropic said it respected the government’s process and would follow Australian requirements. The company has considered a major Australian data centre investment connected to development of its Claude AI model. Albanese said Australia offers skilled workers, energy resources and a stable legal system for technology investment. The government has not connected copyright access to any specific data centre project or approved an exemption for AI training.
National framework includes data centre rules
Australia’s planned AI standards will set mandatory requirements for large data centre operators. Companies will need to support new electricity supply and pay the costs of connecting facilities to the grid. Operators must also reduce power use during periods of grid pressure and improve water efficiency. National Cabinet will examine the framework in August 2026, while the government plans to introduce legislation in early 2027.
The Office of AI will coordinate implementation across federal departments and work with state and territory governments. Officials also plan national consumer safety priorities that build on the recently established AI Safety Institute. Opposition lawmakers have raised concerns about added regulation, while the Greens have requested stronger legal protections. The government has not published the office’s full membership, advisory arrangements or a formal process for creative-sector participation.