Sir Chris Bryant says the government will "get to" regulating AI in the future.
The data protection minister is talking about the government's plans to embrace AI more widely and roll out schemes to get more people trained up on how to use the technology - as UK tech week begins.
He tells Sky News that "AI was made for humanity, not humanity for AI", and that the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) is keen to embrace the tech to boost economic growth, while keeping people safe.
Challenged on why the government has not regulated AI yet to protect creators' works, Bryant says "we will get to it".
He adds that when Labour entered office last year, "nobody had done any work in this area at all in government".
Bryant says they had "made lots of big statements about it, but they'd not done any of the preparatory work".
He says the government launched a consultation, which received around 11,500 replies.
"Lots of people care about this", he says. "We want to make sure that we get that regulation right."
Challenged on whether this will be similar to the rules being used by the EU, Bryant responds that the government is "open-minded as to precisely what direction we travel down".
He says: "If we can get [the data bill] out of the way, then we would very much like to be sitting down with people who work in the AI companies and in the creative industries together, to look at particularly transparency in this sector and how we can get to better licensing arrangements."