‘Accountability has arrived’: dual US court losses show shifting tide against Meta and co

‘Accountability has arrived’: dual US court losses show shifting tide against Meta and co

In the span of just two days, the most powerful social media company in the world faced a more severe public reckoning than it has in years.

Jurors in California and New Mexico gave back-to-back verdicts this week that for the first time ever found Meta liable for products that inflict harm on young people. For years, lawmakers, parents and advocates have raised red flags over how social media can hurt children, but now the tech firms are being held to account via court rulings that could set long-lasting precedents.

A jury in New Mexico ordered Meta to pay $375m in damages on Tuesday over claims that its products led to child sexual exploitation, among other harms. The following day, a jury in California ordered Meta and YouTube to pay $6m over claims that both companies deliberately designed addictive products to hook young users.

These cases were the first to go to court, and soon will be followed by more trials from two coordinated groups of more than 2,000 plaintiffs, including families, school districts and state attorneys general, who have brought lawsuits against Meta, YouTube, TikTok and Snap.

In a rare rebuke on Wednesday, jurors in the California case found Meta and YouTube acted with malice, oppression and fraud. Their verdict, reached by a 10-2 vote in favor of the plaintiff, signals that public perception of social media and its makers is shifting – now laying blame on the business practices of a multi-trillion-dollar industry that has long operated with minimal regulation and few consequences in the US.

“This verdict is bigger than one case,” the lead plaintiff lawyers for the California case said in a joint statement on Wednesday. “For years, social media companies have profited from targeting children while concealing their addictive and dangerous design features. Today’s verdict is a referendum – from a jury, to an entire industry – that accountability has arrived.”

Meta and YouTube both say they disagree with the verdicts and will appeal. A YouTube spokesperson said the California case “misunderstands” the company, which maintains it is a video streaming platform and “not a social media site”.

For its part, Meta has emphasized the specifics of the case rather than litigate its own public image. A company spokesperson said: “Teen mental health is profoundly complex and cannot be linked to a single app. We will continue to defend ourselves vigorously, as every case is different, and we remain confident in our record of protecting teens online.” The spokesperson also pointed to the California ruling not being unanimous.

James Rubinowitz, a trial attorney and lecturer at the Cardozo School of Law who observed the case but was not involved in the litigation, saw the jury’s decision as firmly in the plaintiff’s camp.

“Ten out of 12 jurors voted for the plaintiff on every single question. That is not a compromise verdict,” Rubinowitz said. “That is a jury that heard six weeks of testimony, sat through 44 hours of deliberation, and reached a resounding conclusion that these platforms were defectively designed and that both companies knew it.”

Flood of suits borrow from familiar playbook

Online safety advocates are focusing on a multi-pronged tactic to challenge tech companies’ practices. They are urging Congress to pass regulation, forming coalitions of parents, teens and advocates who can create attention-grabbing public campaigns and bringing thousands of lawsuits front and center. Mike Proulx, who leads Forrester’s research team, said the tactic appears to be working.

“These verdicts mark an unsurprising breaking point,” Proulx said. “Negative sentiment toward social media has been building for years, and now it’s finally boiled over.”

The goal is to force social media companies to redesign their products and do more to protect children online. In the group of consolidated cases in California, juries can only award damages and not dictate changes to the platforms. Plaintiff lawyers have said that if they bring enough cases and keep winning, eventually it will be simpler for the companies to change their platforms than to keep fighting in court.

The thousands of lawsuits against the social media companies echo those brought against big tobacco companies in the 1990s, which focused on cigarettes’ addictive qualities and their makers’ public denials despite knowledge of their products’ harms. Plaintiff lawyers in both cases alleged some of the features that social media companies built into their platforms, such as an infinitely scrollable feed and video autoplay, are designed to keep people on the apps – thus making the products addictive.

Neama Rahmani, a former federal prosecutor and president of West Coast Trial Lawyers, who was not involved in the litigation, likened the verdicts to what happened with big tobacco, calling the rulings “just the beginning”.

“I’m old enough to remember when we had smoking sections on airplanes, and now, because of litigation, anyone who buys a pack of cigarettes sees cancer warnings all over the packaging,” Rahmani said. Such verdicts “are going to dramatically change the way we view social media apps”.

The California case focused on one plaintiff, a 20-year-old woman who was identified by her initials KGM. She testified that she became addicted to YouTube at six and Instagram at nine, which she said instigated mental health issues. By age 10, she said, she had become depressed and was engaging in self-harm as a result. When she was 13, KGM’s therapist diagnosed her with body dysmorphic disorder and social phobia, whic

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