2026年3月25日 美国东部时间下午4:56 /路透社
作者:Dawn Chmielewski、Courtney Rozen和Jody Godoy
节点运行失败
第1项(共7项):2026年3月25日,在美国加利福尼亚州洛杉矶,亚历山大的母亲艾米·内维尔(Amy Neville)、莱利·巴斯福德的母亲玛丽·罗迪(Mary Rodee)、谢尔比·诺克斯(Shelby Knox)、律师劳拉·马奎斯-加勒特(Laura Marquez-Garrett)、律师伦农·托雷斯(Lennon Torres)以及Heat Initiative的首席执行官莎拉·加德纳(Sarah Gardner)在陪审团裁定Meta和谷歌在一桩关键测试案中负有责任后,在法庭外作出反应。这起案件指控Meta和谷歌旗下的YouTube通过成瘾性社交媒体平台损害儿童心理健康。路透社/迈克·布莱克(Mike Blake)拍摄
[1/7] 亚历山大的母亲艾米·内维尔、莱利·巴斯福德的母亲玛丽·罗迪、谢尔比·诺克斯、律师劳拉·马奎斯-加勒特、律师伦农·托雷斯以及Heat Initiative的首席执行官莎拉·加德纳在陪审团裁定Meta和谷歌在一桩关键测试案中负有责任后,在法庭外作出反应。这起案件指控Meta和谷歌旗下的YouTube… 阅读更多
- 摘要
- 公司
- 判决可能影响数千起针对科技公司的类似案件
- 原告聚焦平台设计可能使公司更难避免责任
- 对儿童安全的批评日益增多,辩论转向法院和州政府
- Meta正在评估法律选择,谷歌计划上诉
洛杉矶,3月25日(路透社) – 谷歌母公司Alphabet和Meta周三被裁定设计的平台对儿童和青少年存在危险,这一具有里程碑意义的判决可能迫使科技公司重新考虑如何应对安全指控。
这一判决可能标志着在社交媒体出现二十多年后,全球对其平台被指对青少年心理健康造成伤害的反弹达到转折点。
订阅每日新闻通讯《The Daily Docket》,获取最新法律新闻,直接发送到您的收件箱。立即注册。
广告 · 滚动继续
报告广告
陪审团裁定Meta赔偿420万美元,谷歌赔偿180万美元,这对全球最有价值的两家公司而言金额不大。Meta在1月表示,预计2026年资本支出在1150亿至1350亿美元之间。Alphabet同月表示,2026年支出预计在1750亿至1850亿美元之间。
本案涉及一名20岁女性,她在诉讼开始时还是未成年人,法庭以她的名字“凯莉”(Kaley)指代。她称自己因谷歌旗下YouTube和Meta旗下Instagram的吸睛设计从小就对其上瘾。陪审团认定谷歌和Meta在两款应用的设计上存在疏忽,且未能警示其危险。
广告 · 滚动继续
“今天的判决是对整个行业的公投——责任时代已经到来,”原告首席法律顾问在一份声明中表示。
Meta股价小幅上涨,Alphabet股价略有下跌。
Meta发言人表示,Meta不同意这一判决,其律师正在“评估我们的法律选择”。谷歌发言人何塞·卡斯塔涅达(José Castañeda)表示,谷歌计划上诉。
洛杉矶诉讼中的原告聚焦平台设计而非内容,使公司更难避免责任。
投资公司D.A. Davidson的科技行业分析师吉尔·卢里亚(Gil Luria)表示,这一判决对Meta和谷歌是“挫折”。
“这一过程可能会在未来的案件和上诉中拖延,但最终可能导致这些公司采取消费者保护措施,可能抑制增长,”他说。
广告休息即将开始! 节点运行失败
NEXT Stay Next Off English 480p Auto (480p)
关于Connatix V261275333
关于Connatix V261275333
1/1 跳过广告
广告后继续观看!节点运行失败
访问广告商网站[前往页面]
Snap和TikTok也在此次诉讼中成为被告。两者在诉讼开始前均与原告达成和解。协议条款未披露。
日益增多的批评
过去十年中,美国大型科技公司面临着对儿童和青少年安全的日益增多的批评。这场辩论现在已转向法院和州政府。美国国会未能通过监管社交媒体的全面立法。
根据追踪州法律的无党派全国州议会会议(National Conference of State Legislatures)称,至少20个州去年颁布了关于社交媒体使用和儿童的法律。
这些立法包括规范学校手机使用和要求用户验证年龄才能开设社交媒体账户的法案。由Meta和谷歌等科技公司支持的贸易协会NetChoice正在法庭上寻求废除年龄验证要求。
由多个州和学区对科技公司提起的另一宗社交媒体成瘾案预计将于今年夏天在加利福尼亚州奥克兰联邦法院开庭审理。
主要原告律师之一马修·伯格曼(Matthew Bergman)表示,另一宗州级审判计划于7月在洛杉矶开始,将涉及Instagram、YouTube、TikTok和Snapchat。
此外,新墨西哥州陪审团周二裁定Meta违反州法律,该诉讼由该州总检察长提起,指控该公司误导用户关于Facebook、Instagram和WhatsApp的安全性,并允许儿童性剥削在这些平台上发生。
审判辩论
在审判中,原告律师试图证明Meta和谷歌故意针对儿童,并作出将利润置于安全之上的决策。Meta律师强调原告童年困难的家庭生活是其心理健康问题的原因,而YouTube则辩称她对该流媒体平台的使用很少。
陪审员看到了揭示Meta和谷歌如何吸引年轻用户的内部文件,并听取了包括Meta首席执行官马克·扎克伯格(Mark Zuckerberg)在内的高管上月出庭为公司决策辩护的证词。
当被问及Meta解除一些内部人士警告可能对少女有害的美容滤镜临时禁令的决定时,扎克伯格表示他决定让用户表达自己。
“我觉得证据不足以支持限制人们的表达,”他说。
言论自由和内容审核如何影响公司决策,可能在任何上诉中都将发挥作用。
报道:Dawn Chmielewski(洛杉矶)、Courtney Rozen和Jody Godoy(华盛顿)、Juby Babu(墨西哥城);补充报道:Katie Paul;编辑:Nia Williams、Rod Nickel
我们的标准:汤森路透信托原则。
Meta, Google lose US case over social media harm to kids
March 25, 2026 4:56 PM UTC / Reuters
By Dawn Chmielewski, Courtney Rozen and Jody Godoy
节点运行失败
Item 1 of 7 Amy Neville, mother of Alexander, Mary Rodee, mother of Riley Basford, Shelby Knox, lawyer Laura Marquez-Garrett, lawyer Lennon Torres and CEO of Heat Initiative Sarah Gardner react outside the court after the jury found Meta and Google liable in a key test case accusing Meta and Google’s YouTube of harming children’s mental health through addictive social media platforms, in Los Angeles, California, U.S., March 25, 2026. REUTERS/Mike Blake
[1/7]Amy Neville, mother of Alexander, Mary Rodee, mother of Riley Basford, Shelby Knox, lawyer Laura Marquez-Garrett, lawyer Lennon Torres and CEO of Heat Initiative Sarah Gardner react outside the court after the jury found Meta and Google liable in a key test case accusing Meta and Google’s YouTube… Read more
- Summary
- Companies
- Verdict could affect thousands of similar cases against tech companies
- Plaintiff’s focus on platform design may make liability harder to avert for companies
- Mounting criticism over child safety shifts debate to courts, state governments
- Meta evaluating legal options, Google plans to appeal
LOS ANGELES, March 25 (Reuters) – Alphabet’s Google and Meta were found liable on Wednesday for designing platforms that are dangerous for kids and teens, in a landmark verdict that could force tech firms to rethink how they defend themselves against safety claims.
The verdict could mark a turning point in the global backlash against their platforms’ perceived mental health harms to youth, more than two decades after the emergence of social media.
Jumpstart your morning with the latest legal news delivered straight to your inbox from The Daily Docket newsletter. Sign up here.
Advertisement · Scroll to continue
Report Ad
The jury found Meta liable for $4.2 million in damages and Google for $1.8 million, small amounts for two of the world’s most valuable companies. Meta said in January it expects its capital spending for 2026 to be between $115 billion and $135 billion. Alphabet said the same month it expects to spend between $175 billion and $185 billion in 2026.
The case involves a 20-year-old woman, a minor when the case began who is known in court by her first name Kaley. She said she became addicted to Google’s YouTube and Meta’s Instagram at a young age because of their attention-grabbing design. The jury found Google and Meta were negligent in the design of both apps and failed to warn about their dangers.
Advertisement · Scroll to continue
“Today’s verdict is a referendum — from a jury, to an entire industry — that accountability has arrived,” the plaintiff’s lead counsel said in a statement.
Shares of Meta were modestly higher and Alphabet shares were slightly lower.
Meta disagrees with the verdict and its lawyers are “evaluating our legal options,” a company spokesperson said. Google plans to appeal, said company spokesperson José Castañeda.
The plaintiff in the Los Angeles proceeding focused on platform design rather than content, making it harder for the companies to avert liability.
The verdict is a “setback” for Meta and Google, said Gil Luria, a technology sector analyst at investment firm D.A. Davidson.
“This process will likely get dragged out through future cases and appeals, but eventually may cause these companies to put in consumer safeguards that may dampen growth,” he said.
Ad Break Coming Up!节点运行失败NEXT Stay Next Off English 480p Auto (480p)About Connatix V261275333 About Connatix V261275333 1/1 Skip Ad Continue watching after the ad!节点运行失败Visit Advertiser website[GO TO PAGE]
Snap and TikTok were also defendants in the trial. Both settled with the plaintiff before it began. Terms of the agreements were not disclosed.
MOUNTING CRITICISM
Large technology companies in the U.S. have faced mounting criticism in the last decade over child and teen safety. The debate has now shifted to courts and state governments. The U.S. Congress has declined to pass comprehensive legislation regulating social media.
At least 20 states enacted laws last year on social media usage and children, according to the nonpartisan National Conference of State Legislatures, an organization that tracks state laws.
The legislation includes bills that regulate the use of cellphones in schools and require users to verify their ages to open a social media account. NetChoice, a trade association backed by tech companies such as Meta and Google, is seeking to invalidate age verification requirements in court.
A separate social media addiction case brought by several states and school districts against technology companies is expected to go to trial this summer in federal court in Oakland, California.
Another state trial is slated to begin in Los Angeles in July, said Matthew Bergman, one of the attorneys leading the cases for the plaintiffs. It will involve Instagram, YouTube, TikTok and Snapchat.
Separately, a New Mexico jury on Tuesday found Meta violated state law in a lawsuit brought by the state’s attorney general, who accused the company of misleading users about the safety of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp and of enabling child sexual exploitation on those platforms.
TRIAL ARGUMENTS
At trial, the plaintiff’s lawyers sought to show Meta and Google intentionally targeted kids and made decisions that put profit over safety. Meta’s attorneys emphasized the plaintiff’s difficult home life as a child as the cause of her mental health struggles, while YouTube argued her usage of the streaming platform was minimal.
Jurors saw internal documents revealing how Meta and Google sought to attract younger users, and heard executives, including Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, take the stand last month to defend company decisions.
When asked about Meta’s decision to lift a temporary ban on beauty filters that some inside Meta warned could be harmful to teen girls, Zuckerberg said he decided to let users express themselves.
“I felt like the evidence wasn’t clear enough to support limiting people’s expression,” he said.
How free speech and content moderation factored into the companies’ decisions is likely to play a part in any appeal.
Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski in Los Angeles, Courtney Rozen and Jody Godoy in Washington, Juby Babu in Mexico City; Additional reporting by Katie Paul; Editing by Nia Williams, Rod Nickel
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
发表回复