# 柏林法院裁定Google AI摘要仅为新搜索结果格式

- 来源：The Decoder：AI News（RSS）
- 作者：Matthias Bastian
- 发布时间：2026-06-17 02:19
- AIHOT 分数：65
- AIHOT 链接：https://aihot.virxact.com/items/cmqgzd3w6020xslpu9hxy0z7p
- 原文链接：https://the-decoder.com/berlin-court-rules-googles-ai-overviews-are-just-a-new-search-format-not-original-content

## AI 摘要

柏林法院近日裁定，Google的AI Overviews仅是一种“新的搜索结果格式”，用于汇总第三方内容，而非搜索引擎自身的原创陈述。法院认为普通用户能清楚识别AI是整合其他来源信息，Google对回答内容没有“决定性影响”。该判决源于一家香水公司因商标问题提起的诉讼——AI摘要中出现了其受保护品牌名及平价仿品链接。此前慕尼黑法院在另一起虚假事实案中得出相反结论，认定AI摘要为独立内容，Google须为算法错误负责。两起案件涉及不同法律基础（商标与竞争法 vs. 虚假陈述），上诉结果可能重塑AI搜索的责任边界。

## 正文

Berlin court rules Google's AI Overviews are just a new search format, not original content

Matthias Bastian View the LinkedIn Profile of Matthias Bastian

Jun 16, 2026

Midjourney prompted by THE DECODER

Key Points

A Berlin court has ruled that Google's AI-generated responses are just a new format for summarizing third-party content. Users can clearly tell the search engine is pulling together information from other sources, the court found, and Google has no "decisive influence" over the content.

The ruling stems from a dismissed lawsuit filed by a perfume company over trademark issues. The AI summary had mentioned the company's protected brand names alongside cheaper knockoffs and linked to their websites.

A Munich court had previously ruled differently in a case involving false factual claims. It treated AI summaries as independent content and held Google liable for the errors since the company has sole control over the algorithms.

When does a search engine become capable of making its own statements? Munich treats Google's AI summaries as independent claims. Berlin sees them as just a new way to display search results. The contradiction shows that the core question of liability in generative search is still wide open.

After a notable ruling by a Munich court that held Google responsible for incorrect AI responses, a Berlin court reached the opposite conclusion in early June.

The Berlin court treated the AI responses as nothing more than a "new search result format" that pulls together content from other websites. The search engine doesn't present AI-generated text as its own statements and has no "decisive influence" over what the answers say. An average user, the court argued, would recognize that the AI is just aggregating information from other sources.

The case started with a lawsuit from a perfume company. When users searched for fragrance imitations, the search engine listed brand names and linked to websites selling cheaper alternatives. The court didn't see this as trademark infringement; the search engine was just surfacing information already available on other sites.

Munich holds Google directly liable for AI-generated claims

The Munich court came to a very different conclusion just a few days earlier. In that case, Google's AI had falsely tied two publishers to fraudulent schemes. The court found that the AI makes claims that don't show up in any of the linked sources. Google has to answer for this because only Google controls the AI and its algorithms.

The court also shot down the argument that users could just check the information themselves. It ruled that AI summaries count as independent content, making Google directly liable for false AI statements.

In my view, the Berlin ruling looks shaky on several points. The idea that the operator has no decisive influence over the AI response probably doesn't hold up. The provider picks the AI model, sets system parameters, decides how responses are structured, and controls how they appear on the page. All of that shapes what users end up reading.

Then there's a practical problem. Most users treat AI summaries as a complete answer and never click through to the sources. They consume AI responses like an editorial product, even if the Berlin court thinks it's obvious to regular users that these are just summaries. But as the Munich ruling showed, Google's AI responses don't always pull from the cited sources. And even a summary could qualify as an editorial product.

Different legal questions

Both rulings deal with AI-generated search summaries but rest on different legal grounds. The Munich case was about false factual claims: the AI mixed up information about different companies and invented connections that didn't exist in any source. If nobody's on the hook in a case like that, the victim has no recourse. That's the gap the Munich court tried to close.

The Berlin case turned on trademark and competition law. A perfume company sued because the AI mentioned its protected brand names alongside cheaper knockoffs. The AI had apparently summarized what was actually on third-party websites with reasonable accuracy. The court found this didn't amount to trademark infringement by the search engine operator or a competition law violation.

How appeals courts handle these questions could reshape the entire business model of AI search, not just for Google, but for every company selling AI models with internet access.
