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$6M verdict: Social media’s addiction problem just got real

(4w ago)
Los Angeles, United States
Engadget

📷 Published: Mar 26, 2026 at 03:23 UTC

Axel Byte
AuthorAxel ByteTechnology editor"Keeps a mental checklist of hidden costs nobody put on the box."
  • Meta and YouTube ordered to pay $6M for child addiction harms
  • TikTok and Snap settled early—avoiding trial fallout
  • Punitive damages signal courts may treat algorithms as products

A Los Angeles jury just did what regulators and parents have struggled to do: hold social media platforms legally accountable for addictive design. Meta and YouTube were ordered to pay $6 million in damages to a 20-year-old woman who argued their platforms harmed her as a child—a verdict that treats algorithmic engagement not as neutral code, but as a defective product.

The breakdown is telling. Meta covers 70% of the $3 million in compensatory damages, with YouTube footing the rest, plus an additional $3 million in punitive damages. That’s not just a bill—it’s a jury declaring these features crossed a line. TikTok and Snap settled beforehand, likely avoiding this precedent-setting moment.

This isn’t about parental controls or screen-time warnings. It’s about the core mechanics: infinite scroll, autoplay, recommendation algorithms that learn and exploit attention patterns. The plaintiff’s case hinged on proving these weren’t just engaging—they were harmful by design.

📷 Published: Mar 26, 2026 at 03:23 UTC

The first jury to call addictive design a defect, not a feature

For users, the immediate impact is minimal—no app updates or policy changes yet. But the industry just got a new pressure point. Platforms already facing EU Digital Services Act scrutiny and US state-level lawsuits now have a US jury ruling that ties addictive design to tangible harm. That’s a legal foothold for future cases—and a potential nightmare for risk-averse advertisers.

The real test isn’t the $6 million. It’s whether this shifts how platforms treat engagement metrics internally. Right now, growth teams still optimize for ‘time spent’ as a key performance indicator. But if courts start treating algorithms like tobacco advertising—something that can’t just be ‘used responsibly’—those metrics may need a rewrite.

Meta’s response was predictable: ‘We respectfully disagree’. But the market may not. Investors and insurers are already recalculating liability risks. For parents and educators, this verdict is a rare lever—one that doesn’t rely on self-regulation or political gridlock.

MetaSocial Media AddictionAlgorithm Regulation
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