{"slug": "us-publishers-sue-google-over-gemini-ai-training-with-copyrighted-books", "title": "US Publishers Sue Google Over Gemini AI Training With Copyrighted Books", "summary": "Three major publishers and author Scott Turow sued Google in New York, accusing the company of illegally using millions of copyrighted books to train its Gemini AI models. The lawsuit alleges Google copied books from Google Books and Google Play Books without permission, despite internal warnings of potential fines up to $100 billion. The case escalates the legal battle over whether AI training on copyrighted material constitutes fair use.", "body_md": "**July 15, 2026, (Inside AI) —** Three major publishers and bestselling author Scott Turow filed a federal lawsuit against Google in New York on Monday, accusing the tech giant of illegally using millions of copyrighted books to train its Gemini AI models. The complaint calls it “one of the most prolific infringements of copyrighted materials in history.”\n\nHachette Book Group, Cengage Learning, Elsevier, and Turow allege Google copied books supplied for limited services like Google Books and Google Play Books, then repurposed them for AI training without permission or payment. The suit claims internal Google documents show the company knew the legal risks, flagging potential fines of **$10 billion to $100 billion**.\n\nThe lawsuit marks a significant escalation in the ongoing conflict between creators and AI developers. It comes after a series of similar cases, including a **$1.5 billion** settlement by Anthropic and a ruling in Meta’s favor last June. The publishers argue Google’s actions threaten the economic foundation of authorship by enabling AI to generate cheap substitutes for original works.\n\n“Desperate to maintain its online dominance, Google abandoned its early motto of ‘Don’t be evil’ and engaged in one of the most prolific infringements of copyrighted materials in history,” the suit states.\n\n## Inside the Allegations: From Snippets to Training Data\n\nThe publishers say Google exploited books provided under specific agreements for services like Google Books, which displays searchable snippets, and Google Play Books, which sells ebooks. The lawsuit contends these licenses never authorized use for training commercial AI models. Instead, Google allegedly made wholesale copies to feed Gemini.\n\nInternal discussions cited in the complaint reveal Google was aware of the legal jeopardy. The company reportedly assessed it could face massive fines for using texts from Google Play Books. Despite this, the suit claims, Google proceeded, prioritizing its AI ambitions over copyright compliance.\n\nThe complaint highlights the economic damage: Gemini can generate a **100-page murder mystery** in **20 minutes** for just **39 cents**, undercutting human authors. Specific books allegedly used include N.K. Jemisin’s *The Fifth Season* and Lemony Snicket’s *Who Could That Be at This Hour?*\n\nThis case is distinct from a **2023** lawsuit by authors and illustrators against Google. Hachette and Cengage tried to join that action, but Google opposed their participation, leading to this separate filing. The procedural split underscores the legal complexity of defining fair use in AI training.\n\n## A Broader Battle Over AI and Copyright\n\nThe lawsuit adds to a wave of litigation testing the boundaries of copyright law in the age of generative AI. Authors and publishers have sued OpenAI, Meta, and others, with mixed results. Last year, a judge ruled in Meta’s favor in a similar case, while Anthropic’s **$1.5 billion** settlement set a precedent for resolution without trial.\n\nEarlier this year, thousands of authors, including Kazuo Ishiguro and Philippa Gregory, published an “empty” book to protest AI firms using their work without consent. The symbolic act reflected growing frustration, but legal outcomes remain uncertain. Courts are grappling with whether training AI on copyrighted material constitutes fair use—a defense Google has invoked in past cases, notably its **2016** victory over book scanning for Google Books.\n\nHowever, that ruling allowed only snippet display, not full-text ingestion for AI. The current suit argues the scale and purpose differ fundamentally. The publishers seek statutory damages, a permanent injunction, and an order to destroy all unauthorized copies used in training.\n\nGoogle did not respond to a request for comment. The case is likely to hinge on whether the court views AI training as a transformative use or a direct market substitute for original works. With billions at stake, the decision could reshape the economics of both publishing and AI development.", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/us-publishers-sue-google-over-gemini-ai-training-with-copyrighted-books", "canonical_source": "https://insideai.news/news/generative-ai/us-publishers-sue-google-over-gemini-ai-training-with-copyrighted-books/4244/", "published_at": "2026-07-14 19:06:12+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-07-14 19:23:44.954071+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["artificial-intelligence", "ai-policy", "ai-ethics", "large-language-models", "generative-ai"], "entities": ["Google", "Hachette Book Group", "Cengage Learning", "Elsevier", "Scott Turow", "Gemini", "Anthropic", "Meta"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/us-publishers-sue-google-over-gemini-ai-training-with-copyrighted-books", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/us-publishers-sue-google-over-gemini-ai-training-with-copyrighted-books.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/us-publishers-sue-google-over-gemini-ai-training-with-copyrighted-books.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/us-publishers-sue-google-over-gemini-ai-training-with-copyrighted-books.jsonld"}}