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    Home»Bible Verse»LA decides to prosecute social media addiction – and changes
    Bible Verse

    LA decides to prosecute social media addiction – and changes

    adminBy adminMarch 28, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read0 Views
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    LA decides to prosecute social media addiction – and changes
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    Two of America’s biggest tech companies suffered stunning defeats in court this week in what could prove to be a seismic shift in how social media operates amid a new landscape of legal risk.

    Both Meta and Google vowed to appeal the verdict handed down by civil juries in Los Angeles County and Santa Fe, NM, dismissing the loss as a bit of bad luck. But attorney Mark Lanier underlined the surprise victory in L.A. for his client — who alleged that Instagram and YouTube were designed to be addictive to young users — as nothing less than a proverbial victory.

    “You’ve seen pictures of Atlas with the world on his shoulders – it’s like the weight has been put aside,” Lanier said. “It’s a noble moment.”

    Some experts believed that the test case would be successful. Very few people still thought that it would be a great start for the tech titans this spring.

    But things began to tilt on Feb. 27, the day after 20-year-old plaintiff Kelly GM’s testimony in Los Angeles, when a Delaware court ruled that insurers were not prepared to defend Instagram’s parent company Meta in her lawsuit and thousands of related cases claiming that social media apps harm children.

    Then, on Tuesday, a New Mexico panel awarded $375 million in damages against Meta for child molestation. Less than 24 hours later, 12 Angelenos delivered $6 million to Cali GM

    Now, some predict that the set of decisions could change the fortunes of social media and rewrite the future of American tort law.

    “This is what we were all hoping for,” said Jonathan HaidtA social psychologist and author of “The Anxious Generation”. “If we can win on social media, I think humanity has a chance.”

    While Jeremiah’s name is on the rise among millennials and Gen

    “The world is changing its mind about this,” Haidt said. “When these decisions are coming, they are going to take it even further.”

    Many legal experts agreed.

    Attorney Mark Lanier and his team arrived at Los Angeles County Superior Court during a recent civil trial regarding his client’s alleged social media addiction.

    (Kayla Bartkowski/Los Angeles Times)

    “The broad signal to the market is that the shield is weakening,” said peter jacksonA privacy and cybersecurity attorney in Los Angeles. “Seeing the richest and largest companies unable to deal with litigation like this expands the pool of plaintiff lawyers who will be willing to file similar cases.”

    A powerful 1996 law called Section 230 has long protected internet platforms from most civil liability. The LA case tested the argument that injuries arose not from the content hosted by the apps but from design functions designed to maximize engagement – ​​even if, as Cali GM alleged, those designs were known to pose risks to children.

    This week’s victory could lead to a flood of new lawsuits, even if the rulings are overturned in appellate courts, as the companies, their supporters and many First Amendment experts expect.

    Delaware’s decision is different. Unless it is overturned, which is not widely predicted, the cost of defending those lawsuits now falls entirely on Meta.

    “This is going to fundamentally change engagement on social media,” the insurance defense attorney said. michael coffee. “The insurance industry is going to say, ‘We’re not paying for this.’ “You shouldn’t be making billions and trying to pass the cost of bad products onto insurance companies.”

    He and others said algorithms that expose users to harmful content or keep them stuck on platforms could expose apps to costly litigation. Meta and Google each had several partners from white-shoe firms on the defense table every day for eight weeks in Los Angeles, lawyers who could command thousands of dollars per billable hour.

    Coffey said of the decision, “Maybe the numbers were manageable today, but the precedent is not.” “It’s really going to change a lot in this algorithm-driven business model.”

    The insurance law expert predicted that more defensive default settings, stricter age verification, more stringent parental controls and new alerts to steer users away from platforms will all flow from the courtroom.

    Other observers warned of potentially devastating consequences for Meta and other Silicon Valley giants in court.

    “If you look at a $3 million loss, it’s not that much for Meta or Google, but 2,000 or 3,000 cases at a time, it’s an existential crisis,” said Ari Kohn, chief counsel for tech policy at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.

    Experts said the response from app designers could be swift and dramatic: Think universal TikTok-style censorship and aughts-era chronological scrolling.

    “It could be that social media becomes completely useless,” Cohn said.

    Others see the sea change less as a legal tsunami than a tidal cultural shift — one jurors in New Mexico and California are riding, not talking, into existence.

    Many young users now say they spend too much time on apps. Nearly half of teens say social media is bad for people their age, according to a study conducted last spring by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center. Studies show that parents are even more convinced.

    Moms like state Assemblywoman Buffy Wicks (D-Oakland), author of California’s 2022 social media age restriction bill, agreed that society has reached a tipping point.

    “I have a 9-year-old and a 5-year-old, so I’m living and breathing it,” she said of the fight to keep kids off the apps. “It’s the No. 1 thing parents talk to me about at pick-up and drop-off and soccer practice. It’s thing.”

    Wicks said he worked with companies on the 2022 bill, but after its passage he had to go to war to stop it. With age-verification tied up in court, she and other parent-lawmakers from both parties have banded together to push a set of stronger laws this year.

    Meta Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, who was called to testify in both the L.A. and New Mexico trials, and his colleagues have long argued that there is no practical mechanism to screen out millions of existing underage users or prevent new grade-schoolers from creating accounts.

    Jurors found those claims unsubstantiated.

    “They had some testimony — they changed it back and forth,” said Victoria, one of 10 jurors who voted for liability in the case, who asked to be identified only by her first name for privacy reasons. “It didn’t go well with us.”

    On Friday, the nation’s second-largest school district, Los Angeles Unified, announced It filed a lawsuit against Meta, TikTok, Snap and Google, as well as Discord, Roblox and

    The lawsuit joins hundreds of other lawsuits already filed in federal court for the Northern District of California. The first bellwether there is scheduled to open in Oakland this summer.

    Where school districts go, survivors of school shootings may soon follow.

    “Investigators can look at what content a platform provided to the school shooter in the weeks and months before the attack,” he said. james densleyCriminologist and co-founder of the Violence Prevention Project Research Center at Hamline University. “If we’re saying that a platform’s recommendation engine is a defective product, that digital forensic trail, which used to be just evidence of radicalization, may now be evidence of liability.”

    Experts on all sides agree that the awards reflect growing public anger toward tech oligarchs who want to profit from other people’s children in an era of shrinking opportunities and rapidly rising costs.

    “Just make the products safer,” Wicks said. “This is what parents want, this is what lawmakers want, this is what judges want, this is what juries want: make these products safe for our kids.”

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