Google Faces Multifront Legal Attack: Publishers Highlight $100 Billion Copyright Liability Risk

Tech giant Google faces a fresh class action lawsuit from major publishers and authors, accused of utilizing copyrighted works without permission to train its Gemini AI platform. The lawsuit challenges not only the demand for material damages but also the legitimacy of the data collection methods that underpin the company's artificial intelligence strategy.
Publishers' $100 Billion Legal Gambit Against Big Tech
Industry heavyweights such as Hachette, Cengage, and Elsevier are central to the case, with allegations focusing on Google's potential for copyright infringement and attempts to conceal it.
The Fair Use Defense and Judicial Precedents
While AI companies rely on the "fair use" defense under U.S. copyright law for training materials, outcomes from judicial proceedings indicate that this defense is not impenetrable.
Allegations of Unauthorized Use of Google Books and Play Content
A striking aspect of the case is the allegation that Google abused its past cooperation with plaintiffs. Publishers and authors had provided limited content to Google Books for searchability purposes.
As markets price in regulatory uncertainty surrounding AI, this lawsuit represents one of the most significant "tail risks" threatening the balance sheets of major tech conglomerates. If courts reject the "fair use" argument, a burden of billions could form on the profit margins of Google and similar giants, potentially reshaping capital flows into the sector.