Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Landmark Verdict Finds Meta, Google Harmed Young User


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

- A California jury found Meta and Google liable for designing addictive platforms that harmed a young woman's mental health, ordering $6 million in total damages

- The landmark verdict is the first of more than 1,500 similar cases to reach trial and could set the legal framework for an industry-wide reckoning

- Both companies plan to appeal, but the ruling arrived one day after a separate New Mexico jury ordered Meta to pay $375 million for enabling child exploitation

A Los Angeles jury found Meta and Google liable for designing social media platforms that deliberately addicted a young woman and damaged her mental health, awarding $6 million in damages in what legal experts are calling a turning point for the technology industry. The Rio Times, the Latin American financial news outlet, reports that the verdict is the first of more than 1,500 similar lawsuits to reach trial and could reshape how platforms operate worldwide - including in Brazil, which recently enacted its own digital child protection law.

The jury voted 10-2 after nine days of deliberations following a seven-week trial. Jurors assigned Meta 70 percent of the responsibility and Google 30 percent, ordering $3 million in compensatory damages and an additional $3 million in punitive damages after finding both companies acted with malice or fraud.

The Case That Put Social Media Design on Trial

The plaintiff, identified as Kaley or K.G.M., is a 20-year-old California woman who said she began watching YouTube at age six and using Instagram at nine. She testified that spending "all day" on social media as a child led to depression, anxiety, body dysmorphia, and suicidal thoughts, and that she still feels compelled to sneak away from work to scroll.

Her legal team, led by attorney Mark Lanier, focused on platform design rather than content - a strategy that circumvented Section 230, the 1996 law shielding tech companies from liability for user-generated posts. Lanier argued that features like infinite scrolling, autoplay, notifications, and beauty filters were deliberately engineered to hook young users. Jurors were instructed not to consider the content Kaley viewed, only whether the platforms' design was negligent.

Tech Giants Push Back on Social Media Harm Claims

Meta argued that Kaley's mental health problems stemmed from a troubled home life, not its apps, noting that none of her therapists attributed her condition to social media. Google contended that YouTube is a streaming platform comparable to television, not social media, and pointed to data showing Kaley averaged about one minute per day on YouTube Shorts. Both companies announced they would appeal.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified during the trial and told the court that enforcing Instagram's age limits is "very difficult." One juror later told reporters that Zuckerberg's shifting testimony did not sit well with the panel. TikTok and Snap, originally named in the lawsuit, settled with Kaley before trial on undisclosed terms.

A Global Wave of Social Media Accountability

The verdict landed one day after a New Mexico jury ordered Meta to pay $375 million for misleading users about platform safety and enabling child sexual exploitation. A federal trial involving consolidated claims from school districts and parents nationwide is scheduled to begin this summer in Oakland, California. Legal analysts have compared the trajectory to the 1990s campaign against Big Tobacco, which forced the industry to stop targeting minors.

The courtroom fight parallels a regulatory wave already underway. Australia banned under-16s from social media, France and Spain followed with similar restrictions, and Brazil's ECA Digital law - which bans infinite scrolling and autoplay for minors - took effect this month. The California verdict adds legal liability to the legislative pressure, signaling that the era of self-regulation for social media companies may be ending on both sides of the Atlantic.

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The Rio Times

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