Penske Media is suing Google over AI Overviews
Penske argues that Google is cashing in on its reporters’ work without so much as a byline or a cent.

Penske Media, the parent company of Rolling Stone and The Hollywood Reporter, just threw down the gauntlet at Google, and not with a snarky editorial, but with a full-blown lawsuit.
The publisher claims Google’s shiny new AI Overviews, those chatbot-style answers that sit atop search results, are killing its traffic.
Why click on an article when Google already spoon-feeds you the gist? Penske argues that’s essentially Google cashing in on its reporters’ work without so much as a byline or a cent.
This isn’t a lone wolf howl, though Penske is the first heavyweight US media house to sue.
Chegg, the online tutoring company, filed a similar complaint back in February. A group of European publishers is already in court.
And the News/Media Alliance has gone full scorched-earth, calling Google’s AI summaries the “definition of theft” and lobbying the DOJ for backup.
Google, naturally, disagrees. Spokesperson José Castañeda told The Wall Street Journal that “with AI Overviews, people find search more helpful and use it more.” (Via: The Verge)
But publishers like Penske say that “more helpful” translates to fewer clicks. And fewer clicks mean fewer dollars.
In fact, Penske claims revenue from affiliate links is down more than a third this year, blaming the drop squarely on Google’s AI stealing the spotlight.
The company paints its dilemma in dire terms. If it blocks Google from indexing its content, its stories basically vanish from the internet.
But if it stays in the game, it’s feeding data straight into the AI engine that’s already cannibalizing its audience. Either way, it loses.
Of course, this isn’t happening in a vacuum. Perplexity has been hit with lawsuits from Encyclopedia Britannica and Merriam-Webster. News Corp has lawyered up. The New York Times is already suing Microsoft and OpenAI.
And as if Google didn’t have enough legal headaches, the company has admitted that “the open web is already in rapid decline,” not exactly the strongest defense when you’re staring down multiple antitrust suits.
Is Penske Media’s lawsuit against Google justified, or should publishers focus on adapting their business models to compete with AI-powered search summaries? Do AI Overviews represent genuine innovation that helps users, or are they essentially automated content theft that undermines the journalism industry’s ability to fund quality reporting? Tell us below in the comments, or reach us via our Twitter or Facebook.
