Google announced that YouTube will stop submitting streaming data to the Billboard charts starting January 16, 2026, escalating its war with Penske Media Corporation.
The move marks a dramatic new front in the ongoing battle between the tech giant and the media conglomerate that owns Billboard, Rolling Stone and Variety.
Lyor Cohen, YouTube’s global head of music and hip-hop veteran, said the platform rejects Billboard’s approach of weighting subscription streams over ad-supported streams.
“We believe every fan matters and every game should be equally important,” Cohen wrote in a blog post Wednesday.
The dispute comes months after Penske Media sued Google in federal court over an overview of artificial intelligence. The September lawsuit accused Google of illegally using Penske’s news to power artificial intelligence summaries without consent while driving traffic to its website.
Billboard updated its chart rules on Monday, narrowing the gap between paid and free streams from 1:3 to 1:2.5. But YouTube requires all streams to be given equal weight, regardless of whether users pay for a subscription.
“Billboard uses an outdated formula that weights subscription-supported streaming over ad-supported streaming,” Cohen said. “This does not reflect the way fans interact with music today and ignores the significant engagement from fans who do not subscribe.”
The battle over streaming methods represents the latest escalation in a broader war between Google and Penske Media. Penske claims that Google forces publishers to allow their content to be used in AI-generated snippets as a condition of appearing in search results.
The company said that about 20% of Google searches linking to its website now show an AI overview, and it expects this proportion to rise.
“We have a responsibility to aggressively fight for the future of digital media and preserve its integrity — all of which are threatened by Google’s current actions,” Penske said in the lawsuit.
The media group reported that affiliate revenue had fallen by more than a third from peak levels by the end of 2024 as search traffic declined. Penske’s hotels attract 120 million online visitors each month.
Google defended both disputes, saying the AI overview helps users discover content and that YouTube data will continue to flow to Luminate, Billboard’s main chart source.
Billboard responded by saying it hopes YouTube will reconsider and recognize “the influence and popularity of artists across all music platforms.”
The charting company says it appropriately measures fan activity based on consumer visits, revenue analysis and industry guidance.
Cohen said YouTube paid more than $8 billion to the music industry last year, and now both sides appear to be engaged in a protracted battle that could reshape how tech platforms interact with media companies.

