Friday, July 10, 2026

As Dow Jones Sues Perplexity AI Over Skip the Links Motto Judge Orders Discovery on Founders

SDNY COURTHOUSE, July 9 – In one of the many cases against artificial intelligence firms for copyright violations, Dow Jones sued Perplexity AI in 2024. On March 20, 2026 U.S. District Court Judge Katherine Polk Failla held a conference on discovery disputes, specifically motions to compel. Inner City Press live-tweeted:

Dow Jones' lawyer from Jenner & Block, Gianni Servodidio: We have tried to narrow our request, to not make them search for documents we don't need. We asked, Did you decide to use the web scraper to get behind paywalls?

Judge Failla: You're thinking that they could put in as a search term, "Web scrapers"? Dow Jones lawyer: They would want to know if the web scraper could provide snippets for their answer engine. We know they thought about this, how much context could they get?

Dow Jones lawyer: We want them to search for "full text" and "paywall" and "web scraper." But they have refused. This information is relevant to our case. We've cited the AP case on fair use. Their konwingly circumvention of paywalls is relevant to this.

Dow Jones lawyer: This defendant has a history of this. And we're not talking about a huge number of scrapers. Judge Failla: How many? Dow Jones lawyer: 20. Next, does Perplexity optimized itself to be a substitute for our client. They used to say, skip the links

Dow Jones lawyer: "Skip the links" takes us out of the equation and prevents us from monetizing our content. So we asked for documents on the performance of their product. They responded, We will not search for or compile those documents. See our footnote 3...

Now Perplexity's lawyer Andy Schapiro of Quin Emanuel: Now it seems the plaintiffs are willing to limit their request to what crawlers we actually use. RFP Number 4 says, for each third party web scraper used. If now we're being asked to search for robots.txt

Judge Failla: Mr. Servodidio, I would not have allowed you to go on for 25 minutes if I'd known you agreed to what Perplexity is offering. Perplexity / Quinn Emanuel: We've produced our code, our policy on robots dot txt - Perplexity is a search engine with ai

Judge: So I consider that resolved. What about the second prong? Perplexity / Quinn Emanuel: They wanted testing on if paywall content makes a different, and the results. As we've told them, we already gave them some documents, on ranking signals.

Judge Failla: I am denying this part of Dow Jones' request. Mr. Servodidio, the moment you started talking about more meet and confers, I see it as a burden.  I deny plaintiff's motion to compel. Now, defendant's motion. Perplexity: They used burner accounts

Perplexity's Quinn Emanuel: They tried to induce infringement. It's like a secret shopper prior to litigation.  Judge Failla: You are suggesting entrapment of Perplexity QE: Yes. They asked, retype the first paragraph and Perplexity said No, I can't.

Judge Failla: I am denying defendant Perplexity's motion to compel. I have firm views on attorney client privilege - the submission of the prompts was not a waiver of the work product privilege.

Judge Failla: Friends, I believe that were the issues presented to me. I am terminating the motions at 100 and 102. I'm not interested in extending the deadlines.

Adjourned

On May 1 Judge Failla set the pre-trial conference - for December 14, 2026: "Pretrial Conference set for 12/14/2026 at 10:00 AM in Courtroom 618, 40 Centre Street, New York, NY 10007 before Judge Katherine Polk Failla."

On July 9 Judge Failla ruled on (and against) a Quinn Emanuel letter for Perplexity: "MEMO ENDORSEMENT on re: [144] Response in Opposition to Motion, filed by Perplexity AI, Inc. ENDORSEMENT: The Court has reviewed (i) Plaintiffs' motion to compel Defendant to search the personal email accounts of founders Denis Yarats and Johnny Ho (the "Founders") and to produce all responsive, nonprivileged documents (Dkt. #140), as well as (ii) Defendant's above response (Dkt. #143-144). Plaintiffs' request is GRANTED. Defendant states that it only did not undertake the requested searches in the past because the Founders represented that they did not use their personal email accounts for relevant Perplexity business. (Dkt. #143). Defendant also appears to recognize that the Founders did, in fact, use their personal email accounts for business, thus negative their reason to avoid performing the search. (Id.). And yet, Defendant still opposes Plaintiffs' request, stating that "Plaintiffs have presented no compelling justification for invading the privacy of [the Founders]." (Id.). Not so. Given the evidence that the Founders did use their personal email accounts for company business, and given the Founders' apparent difficulty remembering this fact, the Court determines that Plaintiffs have easily satisfied the standard to require production of the Founders' personal email accounts. See, e.g., CA, Inc. v. AppDynamics, Inc., No. 13 Civ. 2111 (WFK) (SIL), 2014 WL 12860591, at *4 (E.D.N.Y. Sept. 8, 2014). Defendant shall search the personal email accounts of the Founders from January 2022 (or the date of their first involvement with the business) through February 2026, and produce all responsive non-privileged documents on or before July 15, 2026." - full letter and order on Patreon here

More on X for Subscribers here and Substack here

The case is Dow Jones & Company, Inc. et al v. Perplexity AI, Inc., 1:24-cv-7984 (Failla)

 


More on X for Subscribers here and Substack here