The principle that generative AI cannot be held to account has begun to crack in German court ruling against Google
Publish Date: 2026-06-18 04:27:00
Source Domain: rsf.org
- The court determined that freedom of expression does not fully protect Google’s AI-generated summaries since they result from an algorithmic and commercial process rather than a human’s direct expression.
- The court rejected the notion that users could independently verify the accuracy of these AI-generated summaries themselves, holding that they serve a function akin to media headlines, for which the platform must be held responsible.
- The ruling underscores the need for a liability regime to determine responsibility when AI systems generate text, particularly in information contexts, and mitigate related risks.
- Google plans to appeal the court’s decision, and the ruling’s scope is limited to the specific case it addresses.
- Current EU laws, like the Digital Services Act and the Artificial Intelligence Act, do not fully adapt accountability frameworks for AI-generated summaries in search engines.
- There is an urgent need to clearly establish accountability when generative AI systems produce information summaries in search engines.