Rolling Stone owner sues Google over Artificial Intelligence summaries

Penske Media, publisher of Rolling Stone, Billboard and Variety, has sued Google, alleging its Artificial Intelligence-generated summaries use publishers’ journalism without consent and reduce web traffic. The case targets Google’s search feature that places summaries atop results.

Penske Media, the owner of Rolling Stone, Billboard and Variety, filed a lawsuit in federal court in Washington, DC, alleging that Google’s use of Artificial Intelligence-generated summaries unlawfully leverages publishers’ journalism. The complaint, filed on Friday, challenges the feature Google calls AI Overviews, which appear atop search results. Penske says the company is the first major United States publisher to sue Google over those summaries.

In its filing Penske argues Google conditions inclusion in search results on allowing publishers’ content to be repurposed in summaries, and that the company uses its roughly 90 percent United States search market share to extract that content. Penske said about 20 percent of searches that would link to its sites now display Artificial Intelligence Overviews, and it attributes a roughly one third decline in affiliate revenue since 2024 in part to that change. The publisher also contends that, absent Google’s practice, publishers would be paid for republishing or for rights to use material to train models.

Google rejected the claims in statements cited by the article, saying Artificial Intelligence Overviews improve the search experience and send traffic to more sites. The lawsuit arrives amid broader industry concerns that Artificial Intelligence features in search and other products are eroding advertising and subscription revenue for publishers. The case frames the dispute as both a commercial grievance over lost revenue and a legal test of how search platforms may use news publishers’ content when generating automated summaries.

82

Impact Score

United Kingdom weighs new framework for artificial intelligence in public administration

The United Kingdom is rapidly expanding the use of artificial intelligence in public administration while moving away from a light-touch, pro-innovation stance toward a potential bespoke legislative framework. Mounting legal, operational, and political risks are driving a formal review led by the law commission on how administrative law should govern automated decision making.

Observability in generative artificial intelligence with Microsoft Foundry

Microsoft Foundry introduces an observability stack for generative artificial intelligence applications that unifies evaluation, monitoring, and tracing across the full lifecycle. Teams can benchmark models, harden agents before deployment, and continuously monitor production traffic for quality, safety, and performance issues.

Contracting for agentic artificial intelligence shifts from SaaS to services

Enterprises adopting agentic artificial intelligence are moving away from pure SaaS contracts toward hybrid agreements that borrow heavily from business process outsourcing structures. The new model treats autonomous agents as service providers, with explicit scopes of authority, outcome-based guarantees, and tighter controls on liability and data use.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.