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Juries Find Meta and YouTube Liable Over Addictive Design and Child Safety Failures

Two recent jury verdicts against Meta and Google’s YouTube are being treated by legal experts as a watershed moment for holding big tech firms liable for how their platforms are designed, not just for user content. In Los Angeles, a jury found that Instagram and YouTube were deliberately designed to be addictive for children and contributed to a young woman’s mental‑health struggles after she began using the apps as a child, awarding her $6 million in damages. Separately, a New Mexico jury ordered Meta to pay the state $375 million for failing to protect young users from child predators, with a second trial phase in May to determine whether Meta created a public nuisance and should be forced by court order to change its products. The cases build on earlier cracks in Section 230 immunity—including litigation against Snapchat and Omegle—and advance a “defective product” theory modeled on 1990s tobacco lawsuits, arguing that design and monetization choices, recommendation systems and engagement features themselves are unsafe. Advocates and plaintiffs’ lawyers say these rulings open the door to broader suits targeting social media, chatbots, gambling apps and video games over youth harms, while the tech industry warns that expanding liability beyond user content could chill innovation and fragment national standards as more states and juries weigh in.

Big Tech Regulation and Liability Children’s Online Safety

📌 Key Facts

  • A Los Angeles jury found Meta’s Instagram and Google’s YouTube liable for deliberately designing addictive platforms that harmed a young woman’s mental health and awarded $6 million in damages.
  • A New Mexico jury ordered Meta to pay the state $375 million for failing to protect young users from child predators, with a second phase set for May to consider public‑nuisance penalties and potential court‑mandated design changes.
  • These verdicts rely on product‑liability theories that target platform design and monetization decisions rather than user‑generated content, marking a significant erosion of the broad immunity tech firms have long claimed under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.
  • Prior related cases include an appeals‑court ruling allowing a lawsuit over Snapchat’s speed filter used in deadly crashes to proceed, and a settlement that preceded the shutdown of video‑chat site Omegle over child‑exploitation claims.

📊 Relevant Data

25% of teen girls report that social media hurts their mental health, compared to 14% of teen boys.

Social Media and Teens’ Mental Health: What Teens and Their Parents Say — Pew Research Center

Black teens are more likely to use social media for mental health information (49% at least sometimes) compared to White teens (30%) and Hispanic teens (35%).

Social Media and Teens’ Mental Health: What Teens and Their Parents Say — Pew Research Center

99% of reported child sexual abuse material (CSAM) depicts female victims.

Latest online child sexual abuse and exploitation data — Safer by Thorn

93% of victims depicted in reported child sexual abuse material (CSAM) are aged 3-13 years old.

Latest online child sexual abuse and exploitation data — Safer by Thorn

Reports of online enticement of children increased from 186,819 in 2023 to 546,333 in 2024, a 192% rise.

Latest online child sexual abuse and exploitation data — Safer by Thorn

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