**A UK doctor and YouTuber has accused Google’s AI Overview of fabricating serious allegations about his medical career, including claims that he was suspended for selling sick notes and exploiting patients for profit.**

Dr. Ed Hope says the statements are completely false, never investigated and potentially devastating to his professional reputation. 

This case is becoming one of the clearest warning signs yet about [AI-generated answers](https://www.stanventures.com/news/ai-tools-cannot-truly-explain-their-answers-experts-warn-6209/), accountability, and defamation. Let’s find out why. 

## Who Is Dr. Ed Hope and What Did Google’s AI Claim?

Dr. Ed Hope is a UK-based doctor with nearly 500,000 followers across social platforms, best known for his [YouTube content explaining](https://www.stanventures.com/news/youtube-confirms-google-traffic-doesnt-hurt-video-recommendations-2028/) medical topics and media portrayals of healthcare. 

According to Hope, [Google’s AI Overview falsely](https://www.stanventures.com/news/google-tightens-its-rules-against-false-claims-and-misleading-content-2590/) stated that he had been suspended by the General Medical Council (GMC) in mid-2025 for allegedly selling sick notes and profiting from patient exploitation. 

Hope says, none of this ever happened.

In a video published this week, he described the AI-generated narrative as “completely made up,” stressing that in more than 10 years of medical practice, he has never faced complaints, investigations or disciplinary action. 

“This is just about the most serious allegation you can get as a doctor, “ Hope said. “You basically are not fit to practice medicine.”

What makes the situation particularly alarming is not just the existence of false claims but how they were delivered. 

## Why Is This More Serious Than a Simple AI Error?

According to Hope, Google’s AI does not hedge its language, speculate or signal uncertainty.

Instead, it presented the accusations as settled historical fact. That distinction matters. 

AI Overviews appear at the top of Google Search results and are framed as authoritative summaries. 

Users are not shown how the answer was generated, which sources were used, or whether conflicting information exists. In this case, Hope says viewers had no reason to doubt the claims or suspect hallucination.

## What Exactly Did Google’s AI Overview Say?

Hope shared screenshots showing that Google’s AI Overview alleged he: 

- Was suspended by the medical council in mid-2025. 
- Profited from selling sick notes
- Exploited patients for personal gain
- Faced professional discipline following online fame

He later replicated the AI overview himself and discovered additional false claims, including accusations that he had misled insurers and stolen content. 

Hope said he has no idea how long the [AI overview](https://www.stanventures.com/news/how-ai-overviews-work-google-shares-new-insights-6134/) was live or how many users saw it before it changed. That uncertainty, he warned, may already have caused irreversible harm. 

## How Could Google’s AI Have Invented This Story?

Hope believes the AI stitched together unrelated signals into a single, false narrative. Specifically, he points to three factors that may have been conflated:

Specifically, he points to three factors that may have been conflated:

1. His YouTube channel is called “Sick Notes”
2. He had not posted new videos in several months
3. Another doctor, named as Dr. Asif Munaf, was involved in a real sick-note scandal 

According to Hope, Google’s AI appears to have merged these elements, two different people, a shared phrase, and unrelated timing, into a fabricated history and then presented it as truth.

This is not just pattern recognition gone wrong. It is narrative construction.

> So this is AI defamation, which should be outside of Section 230 protection.
> — Greg Sterling 🇺🇦 (@gsterling) [December 12, 2025](https://twitter.com/gsterling/status/1999554241137131980?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

## Did Google’s AI Change Its Answer Later?

Yes and maybe a part of the problem. When searching for “what happened to dr. ed hope sick notes”, Hope documented two radically different AI Overviews appearing at different times. 

One version confidently claimed: Hope was suspended in June 2025, He led a company selling sick notes. 

Also, He exploited loopholes in healthcare systems, he was removed from the medical register. 

The language was detailed, specific, and entirely false, according to Hope. Later, the AI Overview shifted dramatically, suggesting instead that:

- “Dr. Ed Hope Sick Notes” might refer to an online creator
- The controversy could involve a brand deal or online “drama”
- It might even be confused with a fictional character from a canceled TV show

It means, no correction notice. No acknowledgment that the previous claims were wrong.

## .Is This Defamation and Is Google Protected by Section 230?

This case comes as the core of a rapidly growing legal debate: Are AI-generated answers protected by Section 230?

Section 230 of the US Communications Decency Act typically shields platforms from liability for third-party content. But legal experts increasingly argue that AI-generated outputs may not qualify. 

Why? Because:

- The statements were not written by users
- The AI created and published new claims
- The output was presented as factual
- The claims targeted a private individual
- There was no attribution or source visibility

Some legal scholars argue that when an AI system invents defamatory content and publishes it under a platform’s authority, it may fall outside Section 230 protections.

In other words, Google’s AI may not be legally treated as a passive intermediary but as an active publisher.

Courts have not decided this yet. But cases like Hope’s could force that reckoning.

## Why This Matters Beyond One Doctor’s Story

This incident is not just about Dr. Ed Hope.

It highlights a systemic risk in AI-powered search where AI answers appear authoritative and errors can be detailed and believable. 

More importantly? Corrections are invisible and inconsistent and targets may never know damage occurred. 

These hallucinations exist right now and about people who never even realized it happened. 

## How Has Google Responded?

As of publication, Google has not publicly commented on Dr. Hope’s specific case.

Google has previously stated that AI Overviews are experimental and may contain errors, but this incident suggests a more severe category of failure, one with real-world consequences.

For now, the system appears to have removed or altered the most damaging version of the answer. But Hope says that doesn’t undo the potential harm already caused.

## What Does This Case Signal About the Future of AI Search

This episode exposes a core tension in AI-powered search:

- Speed vs. accuracy
- Confidence vs. verification
- Convenience vs. accountability

AI Overviews aim to reduce friction by summarizing information instantly. But when they fabricate narratives about real people, the cost of error becomes extraordinarily high. 

As AI increasingly replaces traditional search results with synthesized answers, the standards for truth, sourcing, and correction may need to be fundamentally rethought. 