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Google Faces Landmark US Lawsuit Over AI Summaries That Publishers Say Steal Journalism

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Washington: Google has been sued in the United States by Penske Media, the publisher of Rolling Stone, Billboard, and Variety, for allegedly using AI-generated summaries that rely on other outlets’ journalism without permission.

Filed in a federal court in Washington, DC, the case is the first major legal challenge by an American publisher against Google’s “AI Overviews” feature, which appears at the top of search results. The lawsuit argues that by showing summaries, Google reduces the need for users to click through to original websites, cutting off advertising and subscription revenue.

Penske, led by Jay Penske, says its outlets receive 120 million visitors monthly but now face an unfair choice: either block Google from indexing their content — thereby vanishing from search results — or continue supplying training material that “threatens [our] entire publishing business.”

The complaint highlights Google’s dominance, with a near-90% share of the US search market, giving it leverage to avoid paying publishers for use of their work. Critics warn this shifts Google from a search engine to an “answer engine.”

Google has defended its AI Overviews, saying they enhance user experience and “create new opportunities for content to be discovered.” Spokesperson Jose Castaneda dismissed the lawsuit as “meritless,” arguing that search traffic has expanded under the feature.

The case comes as publishers worldwide grapple with AI companies using their content without licensing deals. While rivals like OpenAI have signed agreements with News Corp, Financial Times, and The Atlantic, Google has been slower to negotiate.

Similar lawsuits are emerging globally. In India, ANI and the Digital News Publishers Association, which includes NDTV, Hindustan Times, and The Indian Express, have also filed cases against OpenAI over content usage.

Industry leaders say Google’s market power allows it to bypass fair negotiations. Danielle Coffey, CEO of the News/Media Alliance, said, “All of the elements being negotiated with every other AI company don’t apply to Google because they have the market power to not engage in those healthy practices.”

The lawsuit could become a landmark case in defining how tech giants balance innovation with publishers’ rights in the AI era.

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