The New York Times has filed a federal lawsuit against AI search company Perplexity, accusing it of copying and republishing millions of its articles — including pay-walled content — without permission or payment. The suit claims Perplexity’s AI engine produces “verbatim or near-verbatim” reproductions of Times journalism, repackaging it as responses to user queries and substituting for the paper’s own product. The complaint further alleges that Perplexity’s tools sometimes invented content (“hallucinations”) and falsely branded it as Times content, damaging its credibility and revenue.
Sources: The Guardian, Reuters
Key Takeaways
– The Times claims Perplexity used its content without authorization, delivering full or near-full articles to users — a move the paper views as piracy rather than fair use.
– The lawsuit alleges Perplexity not only republished original content but sometimes fabricated material and attributed it to the Times, potentially harming the newspaper’s reputation.
– This lawsuit continues a broader push by major publishers to demand licensing or compensation when AI firms leverage journalism for profit, signaling heightened legal scrutiny for AI search engines.
In-Depth
The legal fight between legacy media and AI companies has shifted into high gear. With its recent lawsuit, The New York Times isn’t just suing a single AI vendor — it’s staking a flag in a larger battle over who gets to control, distribute, and profit from journalistic content in the age of artificial intelligence. According to the complaint, Perplexity didn’t just aggregate publicly available links or metadata; it “crawled, scraped, copied, and distributed” full works — including behind-the-paywall content — and then repackaged them via its AI chat and browser tools. That matters, because for decades publications have operated under a business model that compensates writers and editors for their hard work. When AI firms reproduce content wholesale, they shortcut those revenue streams, undermining the financial incentives that sustain quality journalism.
What’s more, the Times’ lawsuit alleges the AI startup didn’t just borrow words — it occasionally inserted made-up details and attributed them to the paper, potentially misleading readers and damaging the paper’s credibility. In a competitive environment saturated with information, brand trust and accuracy are everything. If an AI platform can invoke the Times’ name or trademarks and supply invented or distorted facts, the consequences for both reputation and public discourse could be serious.
Perplexity may try to argue fair use or point to its previous attempts at revenue sharing: the company reportedly launched a “Publishers’ Program” last year and even secured a licensing deal with a major imagery provider. But the Times contends those steps came too late and that Perplexity continued using its content without any formal agreement. By filing this suit, the Times joins several other media outlets — including the publisher of the Chicago Tribune — in pushing back against what they view as unlicensed exploitation of their work.
If the court rules in favor of the Times, the decision could reshape how AI tools are built and licensed going forward, forcing companies like Perplexity to negotiate compensation or risk legal consequences.

