A local court in Germany has issued a ruling that could reshape the operation of search engines and artificial-intelligence-based chatbots worldwide. The Munich Regional Court preliminarily ruled that Google is liable for a series of false statements generated by its AI Overviews feature, requiring the company to prevent the dissemination of erroneous or inaccurate claims through its search engine.
The ruling stems from a case first reported by the Decoder, in which two publishers discovered that Google's AI-generated summaries linked them, in certain searches, to questionable business practices, scams, and subscription-related frauds, without any basis for doing so. Earlier this year, the affected companies sent Google a cease-and-desist letter, according to the report. Google denied liability, arguing that its automatic summary feature warns users that the information may contain errors and should be independently verified.
The Court's Reasoning
The court's analysis concluded that Google's AI combined information corresponding to other companies that had been flagged for possible illicit practices with data from the plaintiffs, generating associations that did not appear in any of the sources linked by the search engine. Unlike traditional search engines, which merely display lists of links with statements made by third parties, Google's tool produced “independent, new, and substantial statements” based on a misinterpretation of information available on the internet.
“The challenged summary contains statements that do not appear at all in the search results.” – Munich Regional Court, as cited by the Decoder
According to the court, correcting misinformation is not the responsibility of third parties. Google is the only entity with the ability to modify the technology underpinning its AI-generated summaries and, therefore, “must be held accountable.” The court found that Google's line of defense lacked merit, since the summary contained statements not found in any linked source.
A New Interpretation of AI on the Web
Until now, in most legal systems, search engines have been considered tools that merely facilitate access to content created by third parties, affording them a certain level of protection when published information is false or defamatory. However, the German court held that this safeguard no longer applies when search engines incorporate generative AI systems. This technology is capable of producing nonexistent claims based on multiple sources, and companies operating such systems must assume liability for resulting content.
| Aspect | Traditional Search Engine | AI Overviews (Generative AI) |
|---|---|---|
| Content source | Third-party websites | Algorithmic generation from multiple sources |
| Legal protection | Protected as intermediary | Not protected – liable for “independent, new, and substantial statements” |
| Ability to correct | Third parties can remove | Only the operator can modify the AI |
The court also concluded that while Google encourages users to verify information due to potential hallucinations inherent in AI models, this warning does not absolve the content distributor of liability. Otherwise, victims of false statements would be virtually defenseless, since the original sources never made those statements and could not be subject to legal action. Similarly, results generated by an AI system cannot be protected under free speech principles, as they are the product of an algorithm designed, trained, and managed by a company, not an individual's expression.
Precautionary Measures and Next Steps
As a precautionary measure to prevent recurrence, the ruling required Google to remove a large portion of the statements deemed defamatory in this case and to cover 80 percent of the legal costs arising from the proceedings. A company spokesperson, quoted by Ars Technica, suggested that the decision could be appealed. “We invest deeply in the quality of AI Overviews to ensure that the overwhelming majority of responses provide accurate information,” the spokesperson said.
For enterprise decision-makers, this ruling signals that deploying generative AI in customer-facing or operational contexts carries heightened legal exposure. Unlike traditional software errors, AI-generated outputs can be novel and unpredictable, and companies may be held fully responsible for harms they cause, even with disclaimers. The decision could influence compliance strategies for any organization using AI to produce content, particularly in regulated industries like logistics, trade finance, and customs documentation, where accuracy is critical. Businesses relying on AI for data synthesis, contract analysis, or customs classification should monitor this case and consider implementing robust oversight and validation mechanisms.