New York: Google is facing fresh legal pressure over its artificial intelligence products, with Penske Media Corporation (PMC) filing a lawsuit accusing the tech giant of illegally using publishers’ content to generate AI summaries that undercut their business models.
PMC — owner of titles including Rolling Stone, Billboard, Variety, Hollywood Reporter, and Deadline — is the first publisher to directly sue Google and its parent Alphabet over AI Overviews, the generative summaries that began appearing in search results last year.
“As a leading global publisher, we have a duty to protect PMC’s best-in-class journalists and award-winning journalism as a source of truth,” said CEO Jay Penske in a statement. “Furthermore, we have a responsibility to proactively fight for the future of digital media and preserve its integrity — all of which is threatened by Google’s current actions.”
The Core Dispute
PMC argues that Google has shifted the long-standing “exchange of access for traffic” that underpins the open web. Traditionally, publishers allow Google to crawl and index their sites in return for referral clicks that drive advertising, subscription, and affiliate revenues.
The lawsuit claims Google now ties this arrangement to AI Overviews, effectively forcing publishers to allow their content to be republished in summaries that reduce the need for users to click through. “As a condition of indexing publisher content for search, Google now requires publishers to also supply that content for other uses that cannibalize or preempt search referrals,” the filing states.
PMC alleges that since the rollout of AI Overviews, its sites have experienced “significant declines” in referral traffic from Google, directly impacting revenue streams. The company argues that opting out would mean disappearing from Google search entirely — a step it describes as “devastating.”
Google’s Response
Google has rejected the claims. “AI Overviews make Google search more helpful and create new opportunities for content to be discovered,” spokesperson José Castañeda said. “Every day, Google sends billions of clicks to sites across the web, and AI Overviews send traffic to a greater diversity of sites. We will defend against these meritless claims.”
Wider Implications
The lawsuit intensifies the ongoing clash between publishers and tech companies over AI. While several media groups and authors have filed copyright lawsuits against AI developers such as OpenAI, PMC’s case is the first to directly target Google’s use of AI in search.
It also comes as Google faces regulatory scrutiny on multiple fronts. In Europe, publishers have filed antitrust complaints over AI Overviews, and in the U.S., the company is appealing a landmark ruling that found it illegally maintained a monopoly in online search. That ruling stopped short of ordering a breakup, in part due to growing competition from AI-driven search tools.
For publishers like PMC, however, the fight is existential. As the lawsuit warns: “These revenue streams rely on people actually visiting PMC sites.”
















