Penske Media, the owner of major magazines such as Rolling Stone, Billboard and Variety, has filed a federal lawsuit against Google AI Overviews, accusing the tech giant feature of using its journalism without permission.
The suit marks the first time a large U.S. publisher has taken Google to court over AI-generated summaries.
According to Reuters, “AI Overviews” now appear at the top of search results, providing users with instant answers — but, publishers say, reducing the need to click through to original articles.
Publishers Say Google’s AI Summaries Hurt Their Business
Penske Media, led by CEO Jay Penske, claims its online content reaches about 120 million monthly visitors. Yet around 20% of Google searches connected to its brands now display AI-generated summaries instead of direct links, the company alleges.
As a result, it says its advertising and subscription revenues have dropped by more than one-third since 2024.
The lawsuit also argues that Google forces publishers to allow their articles to be used in AI Overviews to maintain visibility in search results.
Without this, Google would need to pay licensing fees or seek permission to reuse content for training its AI systems.
A Growing Battle Between Google and Content Creators
Penske’s case comes after online learning platform Chegg filed a similar complaint in February, saying AI Overviews weakened demand for original content.
Media groups and industry alliances have long warned that new AI features risk undermining their business models.

Google Responds to the Allegations
In a statement, Google spokesperson José Castañeda defended the feature, saying AI Overviews “deliver a better user experience and drive traffic to a wider range of websites.”
He added that people find Google Search more useful with this feature, creating “new opportunities for content discovery.”
A Rare Victory for Google
Google recently won a rare victory in an antitrust case when a judge ruled it did not have to sell its Chrome browser as part of U.S. efforts to open the search market.
That decision disappointed some publishers, including the News/Media Alliance, which argues that the ruling leaves them with no way to opt out of AI Overviews.
As the legal fight intensifies, the outcome of Penske Media’s lawsuit could set an important precedent for how tech giants use AI to summarize — and potentially monetize — journalism.
Source: Al-Arabiya