“Just before Christmas, when attention was elsewhere”, the Government published a consultation paper on copyright and artificial intelligence, said The Daily Telegraph. In dry and technical language, it put forward a proposal that would have “profound” and disturbing consequences: that copyright protections enjoyed by authors, publishers, musicians and artists should be removed, essentially so that giant AI companies can “plunder their work”. This week, the creatives hit back, said Mark Sellman in The Times. Andrew Lloyd Webber, Kate Bush, Paul McCartney, Helen Fielding, Tom Stoppard and Stephen Fry, among others, signed a letter to The Times, warning that the theft of copyright would “devastate” the creative industries, which contribute £126bn to the UK economy, and employ 2.4 million people. About 1,000 musicians also released an album of recordings of empty…