TL;DR
- Landmark Trial: The first jury trial over social media addiction began Monday in Los Angeles with Meta and Google accused of engineering platforms to hook young users’ brains.
- Internal Evidence: Internal company documents revealed YouTube memos stating “the goal is viewer addiction” and Instagram employees writing “We’re basically pushers.”
- Bellwether Status: This case serves as a test trial for more than 1,600 similar plaintiffs in consolidated litigation across the United States.
- Prior Settlements: TikTok and Snapchat settled their cases before trial with confidential terms, while Meta and Google chose to face the jury.
The first jury trial over social media addiction began Monday in Los Angeles with Meta and Google accused of engineering their platforms to hook young users’ brains.
The case centers on allegations that a 20-year-old woman suffered severe mental harm after becoming addicted to Instagram and YouTube as a child.
Courtroom Drama Opens With Theatrical Props
Texas attorney Mark Lanier set the tone for the trial by stacking children’s toy blocks spelling A-B-C before the Los Angeles County Superior Court jury. “This case is as easy as A-B-C,” he told jurors while displaying props including a toy Ferrari and mini slot machine to illustrate the allegations.
“They don’t only build apps; they build traps,” Lanier declared before Judge Carolyn Kuhl. Plaintiff Kaley G.M. started using YouTube at age 6 and Instagram at age 9, eventually posting 284 videos.
Lanier told the jury the case involves two of the richest corporations in history who engineered addiction in children’s brains. He stated that YouTube did not disclose to Kaley’s mother that the goal was viewer addiction. The use of toy props and simplified messaging positions the plaintiffs to translate complex addiction neuroscience into jury-accessible concepts.
Internal Documents Reveal Strategy
Supporting these courtroom theatrics, internal company documents disclosed during discovery reveal Google’s YouTube strategy memos stating “bring them in as tweens.”
Documents likened YouTube to a casino, while the platform’s internal memos explicitly described “the goal is viewer addiction.”
An Instagram employee wrote internally, “We’re basically pushers.” Plaintiffs presented Project Myst, an internal study focused on vulnerable teens.
These internal materials form the core of the plaintiffs’ case that Meta and Google deliberately designed business models to hold attention at the cost of mental health. The directness of these internal communications indicates that company awareness of addiction mechanics reached beyond research teams to product strategy.
This documentation pattern creates a knowledge standard that could undermine defense claims that mental health harms were unforeseeable consequences rather than predictable outcomes.
The case represents one of hundreds of lawsuits alleging Meta exploited youth with addictive features, part of a broader national movement by state attorneys general addressing the youth mental health crisis linked to social media.
Defense Argues Family Problems to Blame
Countering these allegations, Meta attorney Paul Schmidt suggested that Kaley’s struggles stemmed from family circumstances rather than platform design.
“If you took Instagram away and everything else was the same in Kaley’s life, would her life be completely different, or would she still be struggling with the same things she is today?”
Paul Schmidt, Meta attorney
Schmidt challenged the medical evidence presented by plaintiffs, noting that Kaley’s therapists and psychiatrist believed social media addiction was possible but did not diagnose her with the condition. YouTube spokesperson Jose Castaneda responded that “the allegations in these complaints are simply not true.”
Meta said “we’re always working to do better.” Defense strategy appears to focus on pre-existing mental health conditions and family dynamics rather than accepting responsibility for platform design choices.
Bellwether Status Sets High Stakes
These courtroom arguments carry consequences far beyond Kaley’s individual case. Treated as a bellwether proceeding in multidistrict litigation where Meta faces numerous lawsuits, the trial’s outcome could set the tone and level of payouts for similar litigation across the United States.
It serves as the first bellwether trial in a consolidated action with more than 1,600 plaintiffs. Matthew Bergman, whose Social Media Victims Law Center represents plaintiffs in more than 1,000 cases against social media companies, stated that this marks the first time a social media company has faced a jury for harming kids.
Similar lawsuits are making their way through federal and state courts nationwide. Trial duration is expected to reach six to eight weeks. The concentration of plaintiffs into this single test case creates substantial financial exposure that exceeds typical individual litigation risk.
Section 230 Shield vs. Design Liability
Legal arguments hinge on the boundaries of Section 230 of the Communications Act of 1934, the federal law that frees tech companies from liability for user-posted content. Plaintiffs argue that Section 230 doesn’t shield design features like infinite scroll, autoplay, and appearance-altering filters that plaintiffs claim drive addictive behavior.
Bipartisan proposals have emerged seeking to repeal or sunset Section 230 protections, though legal experts debate whether removing the shield would effectively address platform design concerns or simply burden companies with content moderation liability. The distinction between content liability and design liability represents an important legal question that could reshape tech industry accountability.
TikTok and Snapchat Settled Before Trial
Not all defendants chose to face the jury’s verdict. Snapchat and TikTok settled their cases before trial, with terms not disclosed.
TikTok settled Monday evening, and Snap reached an agreement last week. The terms of the settlement remain confidential.
Snapchat announced enhanced parental controls the day after settling, though the company did not explicitly link the announcement to the litigation.
Executive Testimony Looms
As the trial progresses, high-stakes testimony awaits. Mark Zuckerberg is scheduled to testify next week, while Instagram head Adam Mosseri is expected in the courtroom as early as Wednesday.
YouTube CEO Neal Mohan is also expected to testify. YouTube lawyers are scheduled to present opening remarks Tuesday. Executive testimony under oath creates strategic pressure points where statements become permanent record.
Plaintiffs can contrast public congressional testimony with internal documents, potentially establishing corporate knowledge patterns that support punitive damage arguments if the jury finds liability. Past public statements about youth safety will face scrutiny against evidence of internal awareness revealed during discovery, including Zuckerberg’s history of overriding executive proposals for teen safety features.
Parallel New Mexico Case Adds Pressure
Beyond this Los Angeles courtroom, Meta faces mounting legal challenges across multiple jurisdictions.
Meta faces a separate lawsuit in New Mexico accusing the company of prioritizing profit over youth well-being. According to court filings, the New Mexico Attorney General is suing Meta for failing to protect minors from sexual exploitation on its platforms.
More than 40 state attorneys general have filed lawsuits against Meta over youth safety concerns. A separate federal bellwether trial is scheduled for June in Oakland, focusing on claims brought by school districts. The simultaneous prosecution across state and federal jurisdictions creates a coordinated accountability framework where verdict outcomes in one jurisdiction could influence jury expectations in subsequent trials.
Tobacco Litigation Parallels
The legal strategy behind this coordinated litigation borrows heavily from history. Plaintiffs are borrowing strategies from 1990s tobacco litigation, which ultimately led to a 1998 Big Tobacco settlement requiring billions in health care costs and restricted marketing to minors.
Parallels extend to legal tactics: using internal documents to show companies knew about harm, focusing on youth targeting, and framing the issue as deliberate addiction engineering rather than simply making an appealing product. However, social media cases face different challenges than tobacco litigation.
Platform companies can argue their products provide social connection and information benefits that tobacco did not offer. The causation link between platform use and mental health harm remains more contested than the link between smoking and lung cancer. The trial represents the first time juries will evaluate whether platform design features cross the line from engagement optimization to engineered addiction.
Verdict outcomes in this and subsequent bellwether trials could determine whether social media companies face an industry-wide reckoning similar to tobacco’s multibillion-dollar Master Settlement Agreement, establishing corporate accountability standards that reshape industry practices for the next generation of young users.

