AI and Liability

Earlier this month, a German court ruled that Google is liable for its AI search summaries. Rejecting defenses like “users can check for themselves,” and that they generally know “that information generated with AI should not be blindly trusted,” the court held that the AI’s summaries are reflections of the company and “above all an expression of Google’s business activities.”

This is the latest skirmish in a decades-old battle over internet publishing. Historically, there were two different types of information distributors: carriers and publishers. A phone company is a carrier. It’ll transmit whatever you say, even discussions about committing a crime. Words are words, and the phone company does not know—nor is it liable for—the words you choose to speak. A newspaper, on the other hand, is a publisher. It decides the words it publishes, and what quotes to include in its articles. If those words or quotes are defamatory or otherwise illegal, it’s liable.

Internet companies have long tried to play both ends of this distinction. They claim to be a carrier when it suits them, and also to be a publisher when that is advantageous. Section 230 of the 1996 Communication Decency Act enshrined this straddling when it shielded internet providers from liability for the speech of others on their platforms: “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.”

For years, a debate has continued about how to apply this law to social media platforms. When platforms merely displayed people’s posts and comments in reverse-chronological order, they behaved largely like carriers, relaying people’s words without regard to their contents. But the next generation of platforms, like Facebook, curated feeds with algorithms and thereby acted more like publishers, making editorial decisions about who sees what. Some experts think section 230 has gone too far and needs reform; others think that it’s what holds the modern internet together.

Google’s AI overviews are far less nuanced. They work differently from traditional search, which courts have held involves archiving and facilitating access to the editorial content of third parties. AI overviews don’t just quote and republish words from different websites. With overviews, the AI rewrites other people’s words, exercising editorial discretion like a newspaper article or an original essay on a topic.

It’s not only Google’s AI that falls into this category. Imagine a restaurant review site that provides AI summaries, or a site summarizing laws and government procedures. Or a traditional publisher that uses AI to summarize its own publication. Accuracy matters, and liability is one of the most important ways we as a public can demand accuracy and hold companies accountable when they cause harm.

Two years ago, Air Canada learned this lesson. Its AI chatbot promised a discount the company later rescinded, arguing in court that the airline wasn’t responsible for the promises the bot made because it was a “separate legal entity that is responsible for its own actions.” The court sided with the flyer, saying that the airline was just as responsible for what its chatbot says as what’s on its website. The potential precedent here is that corporations have a duty of care for the performance of the AI chatbots they employ.

AI agents are agents of the person or organization that deploys them—and should be treated by the law as such. If a company hired human writers to write its summaries, that company would be liable for inaccuracies in those summaries. If a company’s human agent signed contracts in the company’s name, that company would be bound by those contracts. And if a doctor gave dangerously wrong medical advice, they would be liable for malpractice.

To allow businesses to hide behind the excuse of faulty AI in those same circumstances would be a massive handout to companies, and would introduce disastrous incentives for corporate misbehavior. Why hire human writers, lawyers or doctors when AIs are not only cheaper, but also absolve employers whenever they make a mistake?

We are rapidly moving to a world where AI-powered chatbots will be at the other end of all sorts of corporate communications channels. It makes no sense for a company to be able to honor its statements when it wants to and disavow them when it doesn’t.

Visa and OpenAI recently announced a partnership to build personal AI agents to, among other things, make purchases on our behalf. This is just one of many similar projects in the works, as companies race to provide us all with AI assistants. Will Visa take responsibility when its AI makes a purchase in your name that you don’t want? And if Visa won’t, why would anyone trust the system? Properly allocating liability is key to make this kind of thing work.

If the German ruling holds, it could be devastating for Google’s AI Overview feature. Tests from earlier this year found that it had mistakes about 10% percent of the time. At more than 5tn searches per year, that’s 16,000 erroneous summaries every second. And while most of those errors are benign, some of them will cause harm, be defamatory, or otherwise trigger liability.

Earlier this year, Google’s AI summary falsely identified the Canadian fiddler Ashley MacIsaac of being a sex offender. His lawsuit, filed in Ontario, is ongoing. If Google is forced to invest in improving its AI system until those kinds of errors are exceedingly rare, that seems like a good outcome for users, as well as the subjects of search, like MacIsaac.

More generally, liability concerns could mean that many current use cases for agents won’t be commercially viable. Companies may not be able to profitably operate AI lawyers, doctors and media influencers if they are held responsible for what they say and do.

We’re OK with this outcome. There’s nothing in the law that requires us to accommodate AI systems if they are fundamentally untrustworthy, just as we don’t need to accommodate untrustworthy human systems. Any company that won’t stand by the statements its agents make—whether human or AI—doesn’t deserve users’ time or money.

Posted on June 25, 2026 at 1:03 PM14 Comments

Comments

Chris R June 25, 2026 1:51 PM

I’m wondering how long it’ll be before the use of LLMs in code generation start generating liability claims; if a change to code is created by an LLM and then approved by an LLM as well, and then deployed… who’s liable if it fails?

lurker June 25, 2026 2:42 PM

@Chris R

If you’re looking for a human to be ultimately responsible, then going down your chain, if the only human found is the end-user, then yes, the user is responsible for using something that had not had human control somewhere in iits manufacture. Unfortunately our education system has a way to go to catch up with this simple fact.

r June 25, 2026 3:37 PM

a product you never ordered, that purchase trends might suggest you want (information sourced from non-human aggregate data). since you’ve never seen this product, you’ll be needing instructions enclosed.

those just happen to be ai designed for a person with 3 arms and extra opposable thumbs.

anon June 25, 2026 10:41 PM

“Words are words, and the phone company does not know—nor is it liable for—the words you choose to speak.”

This hasn’t been true since the second telephone was connected to the PSTN.

cls June 26, 2026 12:48 AM

I fear the A1 liability dodgers will hide behind the same reasons that there is no Professional Engineer stamp for computer science, engineers, programmers. Halting Problem, there’s always more bugs, law of the universe.

VV June 26, 2026 2:42 AM

@lurker

You are proposing an extreme version of caveat emptor. This kind of policy is not accepted in all countries, fortunately.
In any case, there is at least one flaw in your reasoning. Besides the end user, there is at least one other person in the chain who has actual influence on the decision to use an LLM and how: the committer. In the case of businesses, the committer is the person who profits from it.

R. Cake June 26, 2026 5:00 AM

Applicable Legislation on the Internet

The German court ruling that Bruce quotes has legal merit in – you guessed it – Germany.
Section 230 of the 1996 Communication Decency Act has legal merit in the USA.
In both cases, courts in other countries may choose to let themselves inspire by such regulations, but they are in no way bound by them.

It feels to me as if we are gravitating towards a world where internet service providers, possibly websites at some point, may have to filter their functionality by the country to which it is displayed.
Of course VPNs blur the boundaries. Not being an expert, I would assume that if a user deliberately chooses to present to a service provider that they are located in country A despite being physically located in country B, then I do not see how the service provider can be held liable for the laws of country B – instead, country A’s should probably apply, or those of the country where the service provider resides.
However, service providers will have to assume that they must respect the laws of the the country from where a query comes, and filter their content or functionality accordingly.

Gert-Jan June 26, 2026 7:37 AM

If the German ruling holds …

We’re OK with this outcome. There’s nothing in the law that requires us to accommodate AI systems …

What a weird tone in this article. It is obvious that a person (or company) is (and has to be) responsible for the AI use of that person (or company).

The AI providers will only provide their services if their user accepts the responsibility of its use, so their product will only be used if they can’t be held responsible. So in practical terms, it will always be the user of AI that is responsible for the use of the stuff the AI produced.

This is the only line of reasoning that makes sense; something that is accurately explained in the article.

Now this may become an issue when we talk about “hiring” an autonomous car – where the user can’t fanthom what responsibility they’re accepting as part of the hiring contract – but for published content it’s very simple. The ruling only confirms that.

JK June 26, 2026 9:36 AM

…and if a person posts or publishes libel, defamation, fighting words, or discloses secrets, etc., then THEY should be responsible, not the AI that they prompted.

Rontea June 26, 2026 9:52 AM

To watch the machinery of humanity stumble into the abyss of its own ingenuity is to witness a comedy of cosmic futility. Google’s AI, a mirror that deforms rather than reflects, now drags its maker into the tribunal of human blame. Law clings to the illusion of agency, as if assigning fault to the puppeteer could banish the specter of the puppet’s lies. We invent these artificial oracles to speak in our stead, and then recoil in horror when they speak with our same indifference, our same capacity for error. Liability is the ritual by which we pretend that meaning survives in a world where words themselves are disowned, where the digital echo of a human thought can ruin a life, and yet belongs to no one. Corporations would have us believe their algorithms hover in a vacuum, immaculate and severed from intention, but the abyss does not absolve—it reflects. Perhaps in holding Google responsible, we hold a mirror to our own farce: the dream that we could create intelligence, but not guilt.

James June 26, 2026 10:05 AM

“Any company that won’t stand by the statements its agents make—whether human or AI—doesn’t deserve users’ time or money.”

Very well said.

Poisson Distribution June 26, 2026 10:54 AM

A computer can never be held accountable

Therefore a computer’s decision must always be questioned.

A company whose product poisons the community well

Must always be held liable.

anonymouse random June 26, 2026 1:45 PM

@JK: …and if a person posts or publishes libel, defamation, fighting words, or discloses secrets, etc., then THEY should be responsible, not the AI that they prompted.

The problem is where the AI generates the libel, etc. and the user who prompted the AI believes the libel and acts on it as if it were true.

Imposing all liability for the libel on the user wrongfully empowers the oligarchy at the expense of the common person. It ignores the fact that the AI — and therefore its owners — polluted the information ecosystem by generating and disseminating the libel, and that they profited from doing so.

Further, the user has far less ability to determine the libel’s falsity than the AI’s owners.

Finally, this approach deprives the libel’s victim of all real chance at compensation, since almost none of the AI’s users are actually worth suing, and the real wrongdoer is “immune”, even from an injunction to prevent the libel’s further publication.

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