Written Answer · 2025-09-24 · Parliament 15

Use of Copyright Law to Strengthen Protection Against Deepfakes

AI Governance & RegulationAI Safety & EthicsAI Economy & IndustryAI Infrastructure & Research Controversy 3 · Substantive debate

An MP asked whether Singapore is studying Denmark's use of copyright law to fight deepfakes. The government said it takes the online harms of deepfakes seriously and will introduce new legislation to strengthen victims' redress. It stressed that copyright law primarily supports innovation and creativity, is not the right tool to regulate technology abuse, and related infringements can be handled via other IP laws. The core debate: whether copyright law is appropriate for deepfake governance.

Key Points

  • Deepfakes cause online harm
  • Copyright law supports innovation, not regulation of abuse
  • Other IP laws can supplement governance
Government Position

Copyright law is not the primary tool for deepfake governance.

Opposition Position

Calls for borrowing from Denmark's copyright approach to strengthen protection.

Policy Signal

Plans new legislation to strengthen online safety.

"The primary purpose of our copyright law is to support innovation and incentivise creativity."

Participants (2)

Original Text (English)

SPRS Hansard · Fetched: 2026-05-02

40 Mr Patrick Tay Teck Guan asked the Minister for Law whether Singapore is studying Denmark’s decision to use copyright law to strengthen protection against deepfakes, by providing individuals with a legal basis to demand illegal digital imitations be removed from tech platforms.

Mr Edwin Tong Chun Fai : Countries around the world have different approaches to dealing with the issue of deepfakes. Singapore similarly takes the issue seriously.

The Government recognises that deepfake technology can be misused to harass or cause other online harm to individuals. In this regard, the Ministry of Law and Ministry of Digital Development and Information will be introducing new legislation and measures to enhance online safety. These include empowering victims of online harms, including those arising from deepfakes, to obtain relief and seek accountability from those responsible for such harms.

In Singapore, the primary purpose of our copyright law is to support innovation and incentivise creativity, by granting creators a bundle of rights to control the use and dissemination of their works, rather than regulate the misuse of technology that gives rise to online harms. Beyond copyright, other aspects of our intellectual property laws may be used where deepfakes result in specific harms under those laws. These include the common law action of passing off, in cases involving misrepresentation arising from digital replicas of identifiable individual traits without consent.