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How VETos researches, sources and generates learning content, and how this respects copyright in Australia and New Zealand.
Version 4.0 · Last updated 3 March 2026
This statement explains where VETos draws on external knowledge when it helps you build training and assessment materials, how that knowledge is used, and why this approach is consistent with Australian and New Zealand copyright law. It is intended for providers, their compliance teams, and anyone reviewing how VETos handles third-party content.
When generating learning content, VETos works from three kinds of input:
VETos uses external sources to learn, not to copy. It reads and analyses material to understand the facts, concepts, requirements and current practice in a field, including any reference sources you provide, and then authors original training and assessment content expressing that understanding in its own words and structure.
VETos does not reproduce a substantial part of any source work. It does not lift passages, paragraphs or distinctive expression from a source and present them as your learning content. The output is newly generated material, directed and reviewed by people, not a reformatted copy of something it found.
Australian and New Zealand copyright law protects the particular expression of a work. It does not protect the underlying facts, ideas, information or concepts. Anyone is free to read about a topic, learn from it, and then write something new in their own words. That is what VETos does.
Because VETos extracts knowledge rather than reproducing expression, and because its output is independently authored rather than a substantial reproduction of any source, researching a topic and generating fresh material on it does not require a licence from the authors of the sources consulted. This position does not rely on any fair use doctrine or text and data mining exception, neither of which is available in Australia or New Zealand. It rests on the more fundamental principle that facts and ideas are not owned, only their expression is.
We stand behind the content VETos generates. On the terms set out in your agreement with us, we indemnify you against third-party claims that original content VETos produces from its own research infringes their copyright.
This does not extend to material you direct VETos to use. If you provide a reference source you are not entitled to use, any claim arising out of that material sits outside this cover.
Subject to your agreement with Supahuman, the original training and assessment materials VETos generates for you are yours to use, adapt and deliver. Supahuman retains ownership of the VETos platform and the technology that produces them. Nothing in this statement transfers to you any rights in third-party material that neither you nor we hold.
Where it is genuinely necessary to reproduce a short, specific passage, for example the exact wording of a regulatory requirement, a standard or a definition, VETos keeps it to what is necessary and attributes its source. Some material, such as legislation and regulatory standards, carries its own conditions of use, and we follow those.
If you believe any content VETos has helped produce reproduces material in a way that infringes someone's rights, contact us at hello@supahuman.ai. We will review it promptly and, where warranted, amend or remove the material.
This statement reflects copyright law in Australia (Copyright Act 1968) and New Zealand (Copyright Act 1994) as at the date below. Both are under active review in relation to AI, and we will update this statement as the law develops.
This statement is provided for transparency and is not legal advice.
Version 4.0 · © Supahuman Limited (NZBN 9429050314928). All rights reserved.