Google sued again for AI training on copyrighted material
Several major publishers accuse Google of training its AI models using copyrighted works without permission, resulting in a new lawsuit.

What happened?
Publishers Hachette, Cengage, Elsevier, and others have filed a lawsuit against Google. They claim that Google has used their copyrighted material to train the company's AI models. The use is alleged to have occurred without obtaining the necessary permissions from the rights holders.
Key facts
| Datum för stämningsansökan | 14 juli 2026 |
|---|---|
| Anklagade parter | |
| Anklagande parter | Hachette, Cengage, Elsevier och andra förlag |
| Anklagelse | AI-träning på upphovsrättsskyddade verk utan tillstånd |
”Hachette, Cengage, Elsevier, and other publishers allege that Google trained its AI on copyrighted works without the necessary permissions.”
Why it matters
This lawsuit adds another dimension to the ongoing debate regarding AI development and intellectual property rights. The question of how AI companies access and use training data is central to both the technology industry and content creators.
Who is affected?
The lawsuit directly affects Google and the accusing publishers Hachette, Cengage, and Elsevier. Indirectly, it concerns AI developers and all companies that rely on large datasets for AI training. Copyright holders at large are also monitoring the development of similar cases.
Quick answers about this story
Vad har hänt?
När hände det?
Varför spelar det roll?
Vilka förlag berörs?
The link opens in a new window and leads to the publisher's own site.
Källan har spårats automatiskt från utgivaren via Aheadlines signalkedja.
AI-verktyg i artikeln
Topics
Get similar news straight to your inbox
The reader's room
Send in a question or an addition. The newsroom reads everything before it's published and replies when relevant. No AI-generated text – just people.
Sign in to submit a comment or question.
Read the article through your role
- Decide whether this affects strategy over 6–12 months or is just noise.
- Discuss with leadership: do we own the right question or does ownership need to move?
- Ask: what risk are we taking by NOT acting on this this quarter?
Generated angle — not editorial analysis of "Google sued again for AI training on copyrighted material"