Dawn Chmielewski and Courtney Rozen
Los Angeles: A jury has found Alphabet’s Google and Meta liable for $US3 million ($4.3 million) in damages in a landmark social media addiction lawsuit that will influence thousands of similar cases against the tech companies.
Punitive damages for the companies will be decided next. The Los Angeles case involves a 20-year-old woman who said she became addicted to Google’s YouTube and Meta’s Instagram at a young age because of their attention-grabbing designs.
The jury found Google and Meta were negligent in the design of both apps and failed to warn about their dangers.
“Today’s verdict is a referendum – from a jury, to an entire industry – that accountability has arrived,” the plaintiff’s lead counsel said in a statement.
Shares of Meta were up 1 per cent and Alphabet shares were up 0.2 per cent, little changed after the verdict.
Meta disagrees with the verdict, and its lawyers are “evaluating our legal options,” a company spokesperson said. Google did not have an immediate comment.
The plaintiffs in the Los Angeles proceeding focused on platform design rather than content, making it harder for the companies to avert liability.
Snap and TikTok were also defendants in the trial. Both settled with the plaintiff before it began. Terms of the agreements were not disclosed.
Large American technology companies have faced mounting criticism in the last decade over child and teen safety. The debate has now shifted to courts and state governments. Congress has declined to pass comprehensive legislation regulating social media.
At least 20 states enacted laws last year on social media usage and children, according to the nonpartisan National Conference of State Legislatures, an organisation that tracks state laws.
The legislation includes bills that regulate the use of phones in schools and require users to verify their ages to open a social media account. NetChoice, a trade association backed by tech companies such as Meta and Google, is seeking to invalidate age verification requirements in court.
A separate social media addiction case brought by several states and school districts against technology companies is expected to go to trial this summer in federal court in Oakland, California.
Another state trial is slated to begin in Los Angeles in July, said Matthew Bergman, one of the attorneys leading the plaintiffs’ cases. It will involve Instagram, YouTube, TikTok and Snapchat.

