German media regulator says Google's AI Overviews subject to German media law


FILE PHOTO: A specially designed Google logo, during the opening of Google's new Artificial Intelligence (AI) centre in Berlin, Germany, March 5, 2026. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/File Photo

BERLIN, July 14 (Reuters) - Germany's media regulator ⁠said on Tuesday that Google's AI Overviews and Perplexity AI are subject to ⁠the country's media laws, stepping up scrutiny of AI-generated content after a ‌German court found Google liable for inaccurate information produced by the feature.

The Commission for Licensing and Supervision, ZAK, which represents Germany's 14 state media authorities, said AI-generated news summaries and chatbot responses constitute content created by the ​providers themselves rather than merely displaying third-party material.

The ruling follows ⁠increased scrutiny of AI-generated search summaries ⁠in Germany and elsewhere in Europe.

In a separate case, a court in Munich held that ⁠Google ‌could be directly liable for allegedly false statements generated by its AI Overview feature, finding that AI-produced summaries amounted to the company's own content rather than a ⁠mere display of third-party information, according to German newspaper publishers' ​association BDZV.

"AI search engines and ‌chatbots are content providers, and we will consistently apply German media law to ⁠them from now ​on," ZAK Chairman Thorsten Schmiege said in a statement.

The regulator said the liability exemption under the European Union's Digital Services Act, which generally shields platforms from responsibility for illegal user-generated content, did not apply ⁠in these cases.

According to the regulator, Google's AI Overviews ​are displayed prominently within search results, making traditional lists of links less visible and thereby unfairly disadvantaging third-party media content.

It also argued that chatbots such as Perplexity influence the discoverability of ⁠news content when they select and present sources, links or recommendations alongside AI-generated answers.

Such services could therefore qualify as media intermediaries and be subject to rules designed to safeguard media plurality.

Google said it planned to appeal the decision, which a spokesperson said "fails to recognise how people's ​preferences when searching for information and the information ecosystem are ⁠changing."

"Our AI-powered summaries enhance the search experience in Germany - they help users discover new content and ​ask follow-up questions," the spokesperson said.

Perplexity declined to comment ‌on the decision but said it complies with ​the EU's privacy rules, or GDPR, and holds SOC 2 Type II security and privacy certification.

(Reporting by Klaus Lauer, Writing by Friederike Heine, Editing by Louise Heavens)

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