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The Kenya Copyright and Related Rights Bill 2026 represents the most ambitious overhaul of Kenya’s copyright framework since the Copyright Act of 2001, introducing sweeping changes to how creative works, AI-generated content, image rights, and online enforcement are governed. The Kenya Copyright Board (KECOBO) opened the draft Bill for public consultation in March 2026, drawing submissions from civil society, the tech sector, collective management organisations, and international research bodies. For businesses, whether media houses, tech platforms, sports promoters, or SMEs that rely on licensed content, the Bill creates new obligations around licensing, takedown procedures, rights registration, and the commercial exploitation of personality rights.
This guide distils the draft Bill into a practical compliance playbook: what changes, what it means for your contracts and operations, and the specific steps you should take now to stay ahead of enactment.
The draft Bill published by KECOBO proposes to repeal and replace the Copyright Act, 2001 with a modernised framework that addresses digital-era challenges. The key changes fall into five thematic clusters, each carrying direct implications for commercial operations in Kenya.
The Bill updates the rules on who qualifies as an “author” and how economic rights vest. It introduces provisions that address works created by or with the assistance of artificial intelligence, a category the 2001 Act did not contemplate. The Bill also clarifies the position on works created in the course of employment and under commission, tightening the default rules on employer ownership and introducing requirements for written agreements where rights are to be assigned. For businesses that commission creative work, advertising agencies, software houses, content studios, these changes mean that verbal or informal arrangements will carry materially higher risk.
The Bill proposes the establishment of a National Rights Registry, a centralised record of copyright ownership and licensing information. Industry observers expect this registry to function as an evidentiary tool in disputes and as a due-diligence checkpoint for licensees. KECOBO’s regulatory and supervisory functions are expanded, including oversight of collective management organisations and the authority to impose administrative sanctions. The likely practical effect will be that businesses relying on content from third parties will need to verify ownership through the registry before concluding licence agreements.
As reported by TechCabal, the Bill introduces provisions enabling courts to order internet service providers (ISPs) to block access to websites that host infringing material, including pirate livestream sites broadcasting sporting events and entertainment content. The draft also contemplates expedited takedown procedures for online platforms, new criminal penalties for commercial-scale infringement, and enhanced civil remedies including statutory damages. These copyright enforcement Kenya 2026 provisions signal a shift toward faster, more aggressive rights protection online.
Under the Bill, collective management organisations will be required to obtain and maintain licences issued by KECOBO. The regime introduces governance, transparency, and financial reporting obligations for CMOs, responding to longstanding concerns about accountability in royalty collection and distribution. Businesses that pay licence fees to CMOs, hotels, broadcasters, event venues, should expect more structured invoicing and reporting, but also greater assurance that fees reach rights-holders.
The Bill updates fair dealing provisions and introduces exceptions aligned with international standards, including provisions inspired by the Marrakesh Treaty (facilitating access for persons with visual impairments) and broader exceptions for education, research, and libraries. The joint submission by the Geneva Centre on Knowledge Governance emphasised the importance of these exceptions for Kenya’s research and education sectors.
| Subject area | Copyright Act, 2001 | Copyright and Related Rights Bill, 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| AI-generated works | Not addressed; authorship limited to natural persons | Introduces provisions on works created with or by AI; addresses ownership and economic rights allocation |
| Rights registry | No centralised ownership registry | Establishes a National Rights Registry for recording ownership and licensing data |
| Online enforcement | Limited to general civil/criminal remedies; no ISP-specific obligations | Court-ordered ISP site blocking; expedited takedown procedures; statutory damages |
| CMO regulation | Basic registration requirements | Mandatory licensing, governance standards, financial transparency, and KECOBO oversight |
| Image / personality rights | Not specifically addressed in copyright statute | Clearer framework for commercial exploitation of image and personality rights |
| Exceptions (education, accessibility) | Narrow fair dealing provisions | Expanded exceptions for research, education, libraries, and Marrakesh Treaty compliance |
One of the most closely watched features of the draft Bill is its treatment of works generated by artificial intelligence. As the KECOBO draft consultation document indicates, the Bill introduces provisions that bring AI-created outputs within the copyright framework, a step that places Kenya among a small but growing number of jurisdictions addressing AI and copyright in primary legislation. The central question for businesses is straightforward: when a machine produces creative output, who owns it, and under what conditions can that output be commercially exploited?
The Bill’s approach, as reflected in the draft text, contemplates that where a work is generated by AI, the person who made the arrangements necessary for the creation of the work may be treated as the author for purposes of copyright ownership. This mirrors the approach taken in certain Commonwealth jurisdictions and provides a starting point for contractual planning. However, early indications suggest that the provision will need to be supplemented by robust contractual arrangements, particularly in employer-employee and commissioning relationships where AI tools are used as part of the creative process.
For businesses operating in the AI and copyright Kenya 2026 landscape, whether tech companies deploying generative AI, media houses using AI-assisted content creation, or agencies producing AI-generated marketing materials, the compliance imperative is clear: your contracts and internal policies must explicitly address AI authorship, ownership, and licensing.
The following clause concepts should be incorporated into employment contracts, service agreements, and content commissioning arrangements:
WIPO’s guidance on artificial intelligence and intellectual property provides useful comparative context for businesses designing these policies, particularly on the interaction between AI outputs and existing international copyright norms.
The draft Bill introduces greater legislative clarity around the commercial exploitation of image and personality rights, an area that has historically been governed in Kenya by a patchwork of common law principles, contractual practice, and constitutional privacy protections. For sportspeople, entertainers, influencers, and the businesses that manage and commercialise their profiles, the image rights Kenya 2026 provisions represent a significant development.
Under the proposed framework, the unauthorised commercial use of a person’s name, image, or likeness for trade or advertising purposes attracts clearer legal consequences. The Bill’s recognition of personality rights as a distinct category aligns Kenya with the global trend, accelerated by the growth of name, image, and likeness (NIL) deals in sports and entertainment, toward treating an individual’s commercial identity as a protectable asset.
For event promoters, talent managers, sports federations, and brand sponsors, the practical implication is that existing model release forms, endorsement agreements, and merchandising contracts must be reviewed against the Bill’s requirements. Industry observers expect that the standard of consent required for commercial exploitation will become more prescriptive, and that rights-holders will have stronger enforcement tools, including the ability to seek injunctive relief and damages, where their image is used without authorisation.
Businesses negotiating NIL deals and endorsement contracts under the new regime should ensure the following terms are clearly addressed:
Event promoters and talent managers should maintain a checklist covering: written model releases for every shoot or appearance; clear assignment or licence of image rights in performance contracts; and a register of all active NIL and endorsement deals, cross-referenced against the Bill’s requirements.
The Bill’s overhaul of the collective management and licensing regime is one of its most operationally significant features for businesses that use, distribute, or commercialise copyrighted content. Under the proposed framework, every CMO operating in Kenya must hold a valid licence issued by KECOBO, and must comply with new governance, reporting, and transparency standards. This responds to the analysis by KICTANet, which highlighted accountability gaps in Kenya’s existing CMO ecosystem as a barrier to fair royalty distribution.
For licensees, hotels, restaurants, broadcasters, digital platforms, event venues, the changes mean that due diligence on your licensing partners becomes non-negotiable. Paying licence fees to an unlicensed or non-compliant CMO could expose your business to claims that the licence was invalid, leaving you liable for infringement despite having paid.
| Licensing route | Advantages | Risks / considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Licensed CMO | Blanket coverage across a repertoire; simplified administration; regulatory oversight under the Bill | Must verify CMO licence status; fee structures may lack transparency during transition; limited control over specific works |
| Direct licensing from rights-holder | Greater control and certainty; ability to negotiate bespoke terms; direct relationship with creator | Higher transaction costs; impractical for large repertoires; requires independent rights verification via National Rights Registry |
The recommended approach for most businesses is a hybrid model: use licensed CMOs for blanket coverage of standard repertoire (background music, broadcast rights, public performance), while negotiating direct licences for high-value, strategically important content where exclusivity, customisation, or territorial control is required. In all cases, copyright licensing Kenya 2026 compliance requires that you document the licence chain from rights-holder to end-user and retain copies of all CMO licence certificates.
The copyright enforcement Kenya 2026 provisions in the draft Bill mark a paradigm shift in how online infringement is addressed. As reported by TechCabal, the Bill empowers courts to issue site-blocking orders directing ISPs to prevent access to websites that host or facilitate copyright infringement, with particular attention to pirate livestream sites that broadcast sporting events and entertainment content without authorisation. The provision is designed to provide rapid relief, early indications suggest that blocking orders may be obtainable on an expedited or ex parte basis where delay would render the remedy ineffective.
Beyond site blocking, the Bill introduces a structured takedown framework for online platforms. Rights-holders will be able to issue formal infringement notices to platforms, which will be required to remove or disable access to infringing content within prescribed timeframes. Platforms that fail to comply face administrative sanctions and potential liability for the infringement itself. The Bill also contemplates counter-notice procedures, enabling users who believe content was wrongly removed to seek reinstatement.
Businesses should take the following steps to prepare for the new enforcement landscape:
Regardless of the Bill’s final enactment date, the prudent course for businesses is to begin compliance preparations now. The following checklist covers the essential operational steps that in-house counsel and IP managers should initiate immediately:
Aligning your compliance programme with the Bill’s legislative trajectory requires a phased approach. The following roadmap provides a practical framework calibrated to three horizons.
| Date | Event | Business action |
|---|---|---|
| March 2026 | KECOBO publishes the draft Copyright and Related Rights Bill 2026 and opens public consultation | Download and review the draft Bill; identify clauses affecting your operations; brief leadership |
| March 2026 | Public consultation period; media coverage and industry analysis published | Submit comments to KECOBO if the Bill affects your sector; participate in industry body consultations |
| April 2026 | Civil society and institutional submissions filed (KICTANet, KnowledgeGov, others) | Review published submissions for industry-specific recommendations; adjust internal analysis |
| 30–90 days post-brief | Immediate compliance window | Complete IP audit; draft AI use policy; review employment and commissioning contracts |
| 3–6 months | Medium-term preparation | Execute contract amendments; verify CMO licences; implement takedown procedures; train staff |
| 6–12 months | Long-term readiness | Register key works with the National Rights Registry (once operational); conduct compliance testing; refine policies based on final enacted text |
| Business type | Primary risk areas | Priority actions |
|---|---|---|
| Media house / publisher | AI content ownership gaps; freelancer contract deficiencies; takedown liability | Update freelancer agreements; implement AI logging; draft takedown policy |
| Tech platform / digital service | Site-blocking orders; platform liability for user-uploaded content; CMO licence gaps | Appoint designated agent; build ISP relationships; verify licences |
| Sports promoter / talent manager | Image rights exposure; NIL deal non-compliance; unauthorised livestream piracy | Standardise NIL and model release templates; implement anti-piracy monitoring |
| SME / startup | Informal IP arrangements; unlicensed content use; inadequate employment IP clauses | Formalise all IP assignments in writing; conduct rights clearance audit; train founders |
The Kenya Copyright and Related Rights Bill 2026 will reshape the commercial landscape for every business that creates, uses, licences, or distributes copyrighted content in Kenya. The changes are not incremental, they introduce entirely new regulatory categories (AI works, image rights, site blocking) and impose materially higher compliance standards on platforms, CMOs, and content users alike. The window between consultation and enactment is the time to act: audit your IP portfolio, update your contracts and policies, verify your licensing arrangements, and build the internal processes that the new regime will demand.
Businesses that prepare now will not only mitigate enforcement risk but position themselves to capitalise on the commercial opportunities the Bill creates, from clearer AI content ownership to stronger personality rights monetisation. For tailored guidance on how these changes affect your specific operations, consult a qualified intellectual property lawyer with experience in Kenyan commercial law.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Fred Ouma Adhoch at Ameli Inyangu & Partners Advocates – AIP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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