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Meta, TikTok, Snap and YouTube settle Kentucky youth-addiction lawsuit

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Score
11

Why it matters

Meta, TikTok, Snap, and YouTube have settled a lawsuit brought by Breathitt County School District in rural Kentucky alleging that their platforms were designed to addict children and cause mental-health harms. The district sought more than $60 million to fund long-term programs addressing alleged learning and mental-health problems linked to student social-media use. The settlement resolves the case before trial, though the defendants did not admit liability and financial terms remain undisclosed.

The settlement's timing and terms are significant because Breathitt County was identified as the first school-district case to reach trial in a wave of similar litigation. Approximately 1,200 related cases are pending nationwide. A March jury verdict in Los Angeles found Meta and YouTube liable in a separate case involving a young woman, establishing that juries are willing to find platforms liable for designing addictive features—a development that likely influenced settlement calculations here.

Attorneys handling social-media litigation should monitor how this settlement affects remaining cases. The undisclosed terms create uncertainty about what leverage school districts actually hold, but the fact that defendants settled before trial suggests they view jury exposure as a material risk. The Los Angeles verdict and this settlement together signal that courts are receptive to claims linking platform design to youth mental-health harms, which could reshape how platforms defend these cases and what damages plaintiffs can realistically demand.

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