Social media giants face landmark trial in US over addiction claims

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The companies behind YouTube, TikTok and Instagram are being accused of addicting young users to content that has led to depression, eating disorders, psychiatric hospitalisation and even suicide.

The companies behind YouTube, TikTok and Instagram are accused of making young users addicted to content that has led to depression, eating disorders and even suicide.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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A landmark trial beginning this week in Los Angeles could establish a legal precedent on whether social media companies deliberately designed their platforms to make children addicted.

Jury selection is set to start in California state court on Jan 27 in what is being called a “bellwether” proceeding because its outcome could set the tone for a tidal wave of similar litigation across the US.

Defendants in the suit are Alphabet, ByteDance and Meta, the tech titans behind YouTube, TikTok and Instagram.

Meta co-founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg is slated to be called as a witness during the trial.

Social media firms are accused in the hundreds of lawsuits of making young users addicted to content that has led to depression, eating disorders, psychiatric hospitalisation and even suicide.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs are explicitly borrowing strategies used in the 1990s and 2000s against the tobacco industry, which faced a similar onslaught of lawsuits arguing that companies sold a defective product.

The trial before Judge Carolyn Kuhl in state court is expected to start in the first week of February, after a jury is selected.

It focuses on allegations that a 19-year-old woman, identified by the initials K.G.M., suffered severe mental harm because she was addicted to social media.

“This is the first time that a social media company has ever had to face a jury for harming kids,” said Social Media Victims Law Centre founder Matthew Bergman, whose team is involved in more than 1,000 such cases.

The centre is a legal organisation dedicated to holding social media companies accountable for harms caused to young people online.

“The fact that now K.G.M. and her family get to stand in a courtroom equal to the largest, most powerful and wealthy companies in the world is, in and of itself, a very significant victory,” Mr Bergman said.

“We understand that these cases are hard-fought and that it is our burden to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that K.G.M. was harmed by the design decisions of these companies – that’s a burden that we happily undertake.”

Design not content

A decisive outcome of the trial could provide a “data point” for settling similar cases en masse, according to Mr Bergman.

Snapchat last week confirmed that it made a deal to avoid the civil trial accusing it, along with Meta, TikTok and YouTube, of making young people addicted to social media.

The terms of that deal were not disclosed.

Internet titans have argued that they are shielded by Section 230 of the US Communications Decency Act, which frees them of responsibility for what social media users post.

However, this case argues those firms are culpable for business models designed to hold people’s attention and promote content that winds up harming their mental health.

“We are not faulting the social media companies for failure to remove malign content from their platforms,” Mr Bergman told AFP.

“We are faulting them for designing their platforms to addict kids and for developing algorithms that show kids not what they want to see but what they cannot look away from.”

Lawsuits accusing social media platforms of practices endangering young users are also making their way through federal court in Northern California and state courts across the country.

None of the companies responded to requests for comment. AFP

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