Social-media companies settle school district lawsuit |
Meta, TikTok, Snap, and YouTube have settled a lawsuit brought by a Kentucky school district accusing social-media platforms of designing addictive features that harm young users, avoiding what would have been the first jury trial among more than 1,200 similar cases filed by school districts across the United States. The settlement with Breathitt School District, which serves roughly 1,700 students, came just weeks before a scheduled June trial in federal court in California. Financial terms were not disclosed. Meta was the final major platform to settle after TikTok, Snap, and YouTube reached agreements with the district earlier this month. The lawsuits argue that platform features such as infinite scrolling, push notifications, and engagement-driven algorithms contribute to anxiety, depression, self-harm, and other mental-health problems among students, forcing schools to spend more on counseling services, monitoring software, and related support programs. In separate, ongoing litigation, more than 40 states have also filed lawsuits that claim Meta’s products cause safety issues for young people.