Jury begins landmark trial on child harm liability
Twelve jurors are set to deliberate and render a verdict following approximately one month of testimony from experts, therapists, engineers, executives including Mark Zuckerberg regarding social media's impact on children. Lawyers for the plaintiff have made closing arguments before addressing Meta (Facebook) and YouTube in this high-profile case concerning liability for harms caused by addictive platforms used by minors. The trial concludes with jurors tasked to decide whether these technology companies should be held responsible based on evidence presented throughout their testimony phase.
Key Points
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1A landmark trial is underway determining if tech giants like Meta and YouTube are legally responsible for harm caused by their platforms' addictive features.
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2After approximately one month of hearings featuring experts, therapists, engineers, executives (including Mark Zuckerberg), the jury has concluded its fact-finding phase to begin deliberations on Friday March 13th in Los Angeles. Twelve jurors will decide if social media companies should be held liable for harms inflicted upon children using these platforms.
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3The trial's outcome could set a significant precedent regarding corporate liability and child safety within digital ecosystems.
Developments
Twelve jurors will decide whether Meta and Google should be liable for harm caused to children using their social media platforms following a month of hearings in this landmark "bellwether" trial, which is being used as the first test case against tech giants. The plaintiff's lawyer argued that these companies engineered addiction through features designed like Trojan horses targeting vulnerable users before TikTok and Snapchat settled out of court earlier.