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New rules confirm public has a right to see how UK government uses AI

Government departments and other public bodies in the UK must consider requests to release information about AI-produced content, regulators have confirmed. The move follows a successful request by 麻豆传媒 for the release of a minister's ChatGPT logs

By Chris Stokel-Walker

13 May 2026

The use of AI chatbots is subject to the UK’s Freedom of Information laws

Maurice from Zoetermeer (CC BY 2.0)

Text, images and other content produced by UK government departments and other public bodies using artificial intelligence are subject to freedom of information (FOI) laws, regulators have confirmed 鈥 potentially opening the door for the public to gain access to ministers鈥 ChatGPT or other chatbot records.

The Information Commissioner鈥檚 Office (ICO), the UK鈥檚 data-protection agency, has released confirming that 鈥淚f staff at a public authority use AI for work purposes, the information generated will be subject to FOIA [the Freedom of Information Act] along with the prompts used鈥.

Last year, 麻豆传媒 successfully requested the then-UK tech secretary Peter Kyle鈥檚 ChatGPT logs under FOI legislation, in what is believed to be a world first. That triggered subsequent requests from other news outlets to obtain other information, but many have either been rejected or labelled as , an umbrella term that allows authorities to reject a request.

The clarification by the ICO could change that. 鈥淚t will be very difficult for public authorities now to claim that AI-related requests are not subject to FOIA,鈥 says at Mishcon de Reya, a London-based law firm.

鈥淭he ICO guidance is generally sensible, and won鈥檛 come as a surprise to most practitioners,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f information is 鈥榟eld鈥 in a recorded form by a public authority, wherever, and on whatever system, it is subject in principle to FOIA 鈥 so that must also apply to inputs to and outputs of AI systems and tools.鈥

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鈥淚 think it should be uncontroversial,鈥 says , a data-protection expert based in Manchester, UK. 聽鈥淚f records are captured by a public servant doing their job, they鈥檙e in scope,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat should be true for AI interactions and Post-it notes alike.鈥

The new guidelines could potentially enable successful requests for the prompts used by government workers in AI tools. The ICO that public bodies may be required to use AI to summarise large documents or datasets when responding to requests, allowing them to answer requests previously dismissed on cost grounds.

Some have criticised the ability to obtain AI chat logs using FOI legislation. , the chair of the UK鈥檚 Advanced Research and Invention Agency (ARIA), recently that the ruling to release Kyle鈥檚 interactions with ChatGPT was 鈥渁bsurd鈥, 鈥渉ugely corrosive and more or less guarantees that no minister will (say they) use AI鈥. Unusually for a public body, ARIA is exempt from FOI laws.

When asked if the new guidelines were triggered by 麻豆传媒鈥檚 successful FOI request, the ICO declined to answer. A spokesperson says: 鈥淲e regularly attend events and seek feedback on areas where both public authorities and requestors would value additional clarity and guidance. Our recent guidance on AI and FOI reflects what we have been hearing from organisations, and we tested the content with our external stakeholders to make sure it was as clear and useful as possible.鈥

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