2026年2月9日 / 美国东部时间晚上8:31 / 美联社
全球最大的社交媒体公司今年面临多起具有里程碑意义的诉讼,这些诉讼旨在追究它们对使用其平台的儿童造成伤害的责任。周一,洛杉矶县高等法院开始审理其中一起诉讼的开庭陈述。
Instagram母公司Meta和谷歌旗下的YouTube被指控其平台故意使儿童成瘾并造成伤害。最初被列为被告的TikTok和Snap公司已就未披露金额达成和解。
陪审员首次了解到这场漫长审判的初步情况,原告与剩余两名被列为被告的社交媒体公司将呈现截然不同的叙述。
原告方律师马克·莱尼尔(Mark Lanier)进行了开场陈述,他生动地表示此案“简单得就像ABC”,并解释ABC代表“addicting the brains of children(毒害儿童大脑)”。他称Meta和谷歌是“历史上最富有的两家公司”,并“精心设计了儿童大脑成瘾机制”。
他向陪审员展示了Meta和YouTube及其母公司谷歌的大量内部电子邮件、文件和研究报告。他强调了Meta开展的一项名为“Project Myst”的研究结果,该研究调查了1000名青少年及其父母的社交媒体使用情况。莱尼尔称,研究的两大发现是:该公司明知经历创伤和压力等“不良事件”的儿童特别容易成瘾;且父母的监督和控制几乎不起作用。
内部公司文件
他还展示了谷歌的内部文件,将YouTube比作赌场,并播放了Meta员工之间的内部交流,其中一人称Instagram“就像毒品”,员工“基本上就是推手”。
洛杉矶这起案件的核心是一名仅用首字母“KGM”指代的20岁原告,她的案件可能决定数千起类似针对社交媒体公司的诉讼走向。她和另外两名原告已被选为“领头羊审判”(bellwether trials)的成员——即双方测试陪审团如何裁决的试验性案件。
莱尼尔在陈述中提到,休息期间KGM短暂露面,庭审后期她将出庭作证。他详细讲述了她的童年,尤其关注她使用社交媒体前的性格特点,称她母亲小时候叫她“创意火花”。莱尼尔表示,她6岁开始使用YouTube,9岁使用Instagram,小学毕业前已在YouTube发布了284个视频。
审判结果可能对公司业务以及它们管理儿童使用平台的方式产生深远影响。
莱尼尔称,这些公司的律师将“试图指责这个小女孩和她的父母,是他们建造了这个陷阱”,并提到原告。她称自己未成年时就对社交媒体平台上瘾,这对她的心理健康产生了不利影响。
尽管Meta和YouTube公开表示致力于保护儿童并为其使用平台实施安全措施,但莱尼尔指出,内部文件显示它们的实际立场完全不同,甚至明确将幼儿列为目标受众。
莱尼尔还将社交媒体公司与烟草公司进行对比,引用了Meta员工对公司未能主动采取措施防范平台对儿童和青少年潜在危害的担忧。
“对青少年而言,社交认同就是生存,”莱尼尔说。被告“设计了迎合未成年人对社交认同渴望的功能”,他指的是“点赞”按钮等类似功能。
“这只是第一起案件——今天开始的社交媒体成瘾审判中,已有数百名家长和学区参与,可悲的是,每天都有新的家庭站出来,将大型科技公司告上法庭,因其故意生产有害产品,”非营利组织“科技监督项目”(Tech Oversight Project)执行董事萨沙·霍沃思(Sacha Haworth)表示。
审判预计持续约8周,期间不会要求陪审员停止使用Facebook、Instagram、YouTube或其他社交媒体形式,但法官卡罗琳·B·库尔(Carolyn B. Kuhl)强调,他们不应改变与平台的互动方式,包括调整设置或创建新账户。
库尔表示,陪审员应在审议时独立判断Meta和YouTube的责任。
与此同时,新墨西哥州的另一宗审判也于周一启动开庭陈述。
KGM声称,她从小使用社交媒体使她沉迷于科技,并加剧了抑郁和自杀念头。值得注意的是,诉讼称这是公司通过刻意设计选择造成的,目的是让平台对儿童更具成瘾性以增加利润。这一论点如成立,可能绕过公司的第一修正案保护和第230条规定(该条款保护科技公司对平台上第三方发布内容的责任)。
诉讼称:“被告大量借鉴老虎机使用的行为和神经生物学技术,以及烟草行业的利用手法,故意在产品中植入一系列设计功能,旨在最大限度提高青少年参与度以推动广告收入。”
预计马克·扎克伯格将出庭作证
包括Meta首席执行官马克·扎克伯格在内的高管预计将出庭作证,审判将持续6至8周。专家认为此案与20世纪90年代的“大烟草审判”类似,后者导致烟草公司支付数十亿美元医疗费用并限制向未成年人营销。
科技公司否认其产品故意伤害儿童,称多年来已添加大量安全保障措施,并表示不对第三方发布内容负责。
Meta发言人在最近的声明中表示:“公司强烈反对诉讼中提出的指控,坚信证据将表明我们长期以来致力于支持年轻人。”
谷歌发言人何塞·卡斯塔涅达(José Castañeda)称针对YouTube的指控“完全不属实”,并表示“为年轻人提供更安全、健康的体验一直是我们工作的核心”。
这起案件将是今年一系列追究社交媒体公司损害儿童心理健康责任的诉讼中的第一起。
在新墨西哥州,周一启动的审判指控Meta及其社交平台未能保护年轻用户免受性剥削,这是基于一项卧底在线调查。2023年底,总检察长劳尔·托雷斯(Raúl Torrez)起诉Meta和扎克伯格,后者随后被从诉讼中移除。
6月在加利福尼亚州奥克兰开始的联邦“领头羊审判”将首次代表因儿童受害而起诉社交媒体平台的学区。
此外,超过40个州检察长已对Meta提起诉讼,指控其通过在Instagram和Facebook上设计使儿童成瘾的功能,故意伤害年轻人并加剧青少年心理健康危机。大多数案件在联邦法院提起,部分则在各州法院起诉。TikTok也面临十多个州的类似诉讼。
与此同时,其他国家正出台限制儿童使用社交媒体的新法律。今年1月,法国议员批准一项法案,禁止15岁以下儿童使用社交媒体,这为法案在明年9月新学年开始时生效铺平了道路。欧洲多国正推动为使用社交媒体设定最低年龄的想法。
澳大利亚官员称,自该国禁止16岁以下儿童使用这些平台以来,社交媒体公司已注销了约470万个被识别为属于儿童的账户。这项法律在澳大利亚引发了关于科技使用、隐私、儿童安全和心理健康的激烈辩论,并促使其他国家考虑类似措施。
英国政府上月也表示,将考虑禁止青少年使用社交媒体,同时加强保护儿童免受有害内容和过度屏幕时间影响的法律。
Social media companies accused of “addicting the brains of children” as trial begins
February 9, 2026 / 8:31 PM EST / AP
The world’s biggest social media companies face several landmark trials this year that seek to hold them responsible for harms to children who use their platforms. Opening statements in one such trial in Los Angeles County Superior Court began on Monday.
Instagram’s parent company Meta and Google’s YouTube face claims that their platforms deliberately addict and harm children. TikTok and Snap, which were originally named in the lawsuit, settled for undisclosed sums.
Jurors got their first glimpse into what will be a lengthy trial characterized by dueling narratives from the plaintiffs and the two remaining social media companies named as defendants.
Mark Lanier delivered the opening statement for the plaintiffs first, in a lively display where he said the case is as “easy as ABC,” which he said stands for “addicting the brains of children.” He called Meta and Google “two of the richest corporations in history” that have “engineered addiction in children’s brains.”
He presented jurors with a slew of internal emails, documents and studies conducted by Meta and YouTube, as well as YouTube’s parent company, Google. He emphasized the findings of a study Meta conducted called “Project Myst” in which they surveyed 1,000 teens and their parents about their social media use. The two major findings, Lanier said, were that the company knew children who experienced “adverse events” like trauma and stress were particularly vulnerable for addiction; and that parental supervision and controls made little impact.
Internal company documents
He also showed internal Google documents that likened YouTube to a casino, and internal communication between Meta employees in which one person said Instagram is “like a drug” and that employees are “basically pushers.”
At the core of the Los Angeles case is a 20-year-old identified only by the initials “KGM,” whose case could determine how thousands of other, similar lawsuits against social media companies will play out. She and two other plaintiffs have been selected for bellwether trials — essentially test cases for both sides to see how their arguments play out before a jury.
KGM made a brief appearance after a break during Lanier’s statement and she will return to testify later in the trial. Lanier spent time speaking about her childhood, and particularly focused on what her personality was like before she began using social media, saying her mother called her a “creative spark” as a child. She started using YouTube at age 6 and Instagram at age 9, Lanier said. Before she graduated elementary school, she had posted 284 videos on YouTube.
The outcome of the trial could have profound effects on the companies’ businesses and how they will handle children using their platforms.
Lanier said the companies’ lawyers will “try to blame the little girl and her parents for the trap they built,” referencing the plaintiff. She was a minor when she said she became addicted to social media platforms, which she claims had a detrimental impact on her mental health.
Lanier said that despite the public position of Meta and YouTube being that they work to protect children and implement safeguards for their use of the platforms, their internal documents show an entirely different position, with explicit references to young children being listed as their target audiences.
Lanier also drew comparisons between the social media companies and tobacco firms, citing internal communication between Meta employees who were concerned about the company’s lack of proactive action about the potential harm their platforms can have on children and teens.
“For a teenager, social validation is survival,” Lanier said. The defendants “engineered a feature that caters to a minor’s craving for social validation,” he added, speaking about “like” buttons and similar features.
“This was only the first case — there are hundreds of parents and school districts in the social media addiction trials that start today, and sadly, new families every day who are speaking out and bringing Big Tech to court for its deliberately harmful products,” said Sacha Haworth, executive director of the nonprofit Tech Oversight Project.
Jurors are not being asked to stop using Facebook, Instagram, YouTube or any other forms of social media throughout the course of the trial — which is expected to last about eight weeks — but Judge Carolyn B. Kuhl emphasized that they should not make any changes to the way they interact with the platforms, including changing their settings or creating new accounts.
Kuhl said that jurors should decide the liability of Meta and YouTube independently when they deliberate.
A separate trial in New Mexico, meanwhile, also kicked off with opening statements on Monday.
KGM claims that her use of social media from an early age addicted her to the technology and exacerbated depression and suicidal thoughts. Importantly, the lawsuit claims that this was done through deliberate design choices made by companies that sought to make their platforms more addictive to children to boost profits. This argument, if successful, could sidestep the companies’ First Amendment shield and Section 230, which protects tech companies from liability for material posted on their platforms.
“Borrowing heavily from the behavioral and neurobiological techniques used by slot machines and exploited by the cigarette industry, Defendants deliberately embedded in their products an array of design features aimed at maximizing youth engagement to drive advertising revenue,” the lawsuit says.
Mark Zuckerberg expected to testify
Executives, including Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, are expected to testify at the trial, which will last six to eight weeks. Experts have drawn similarities to the Big Tobacco trials that led to a 1998 settlement requiring cigarette companies to pay billions in health care costs and restrict marketing targeting minors.
The tech companies dispute the claims that their products deliberately harm children, citing a bevy of safeguards they have added over the years and arguing that they are not liable for content posted on their sites by third parties.
A Meta spokesperson said in a recent statement that the company strongly disagrees with the allegations outlined in the lawsuit and that it’s “confident the evidence will show our longstanding commitment to supporting young people.”
José Castañeda, a Google spokesperson, said that the allegations against YouTube are “simply not true.” In a statement, he said, “Providing young people with a safer, healthier experience has always been core to our work.”
The case will be the first in a slew of cases beginning this year that seek to hold social media companies responsible for harming children’s mental well-being.
In New Mexico, opening statements began Monday for trial on allegations that Meta and its social media platforms have failed to protect young users from sexual exploitation, following an undercover online investigation. Attorney General Raúl Torrez in late 2023 sued Meta and Zuckerberg, who was later dropped from the suit.
A federal bellwether trial beginning in June in Oakland, California, will be the first to represent school districts that have sued social media platforms over harms to children.
In addition, more than 40 state attorneys general have filed lawsuits against Meta, claiming it is harming young people and contributing to the youth mental health crisis by deliberately designing features on Instagram and Facebook that addict children to its platforms. The majority of cases filed their lawsuits in federal court, but some sued in their respective states.
TikTok also faces similar lawsuits in more than a dozen states.
Other countries, meanwhile, are enacting new laws to limit social media for children. In January, French lawmakers approved a bill banning social media for children under 15, paving the way for the measure to enter into force at the start of the next school year in September, as the idea of setting a minimum age for use of the platforms gains momentum across Europe.
In Australia, social media companies have revoked access to about 4.7 million accounts identified as belonging to children since the country banned use of the platforms by those under 16, officials said. The law provoked fraught debates in Australia about technology use, privacy, child safety and mental health and has prompted other countries to consider similar measures.
The British government also said last month it will consider banning young teenagers from social media as it tightens laws designed to protect children from harmful content and excessive screen time.
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