Facebook, Instagram pulling ads from lawyers looking for plaintiffs ... to sue them

Published
Score
11

Why it matters

Core event: On April 9, 2026, Meta Platforms began removing advertisements on Facebook, Instagram, Threads, Messenger, and its Audience Network from law firms recruiting plaintiffs—primarily minors or their parents—for lawsuits alleging harm from social media addiction.[1][2][3]

Involved parties: Meta Platforms (led by CEO Mark Zuckerberg) is pulling the ads; targeted firms include Morgan & Morgan and Sokolove Law; YouTube (Google) was a co-defendant in a related case; U.S. lawyers are seeking clients for potential class actions, possibly backed by private equity.[2][3][4]

Context and timeline: This follows a California jury verdict two weeks prior (late March 2026) finding Meta and YouTube negligent in a social media addiction case, which both are appealing; Meta cited its terms of service to block ads deemed a legal risk, stating it won't let "trial lawyers profit from our platforms while claiming they are harmful."[2][3] Ads highlighted teen issues like anxiety, depression, self-harm linked to platforms targeting minors.[2][3]

Newsworthiness: The move escalates Meta's defense amid surging litigation post-verdict, with lawyers nationwide building class actions for big payouts—ironic as they used Meta's ad tools against it—spotlighting tensions over teen mental health, platform liability, and ad policy enforcement.[2][3][4]

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