Jury finds Meta, YouTube ‘negligent’ in trial over addictive social media


What you need to know

  • A Los Angeles court jury has reached its final verdict, stating that it finds Meta and YouTube guilty of being “negligent” in the addictive nature of their social media apps.
  • Kaley, otherwise referred to as K.G.M., claimed that she had become extremely addicted to YouTube and Instagram from a young age, which led to severe mental health problems.
  • K.G.M. was awarded $3 million in damages, of which Meta will handle 70%.

A verdict has reportedly been reached in the trial of social media addiction that put Meta and YouTube in the spotlight.

This afternoon (Mar 25), it was reported that Meta and YouTube had “failed” to warn users, especially younger users, about the potential dangers of excessively using social media. CNBC reiterates that the trial concerned Kaley (or K.G.M.), a young woman who took these two companies (among others) to court. The plaintiff, now 20 years of age, said that she had become “addicted” to social media since she was a child. K.G.M. added that, due to her usage of such apps, her mental health declined, resulting in “mental health-related harms,” per CNBC.

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