Drugwatch Investigates
What did Meta and YouTube know about the harm they were causing to children — and when did they know it? The evidence just went before a jury for the first time, and the verdict is in. In this episode, attorney and consumer safety advocate Whitney Di Bona sits down with Nicki Petrossi, host of the Scrolling 2 Death podcast and former social media marketing executive, who spent nearly every day inside the Los Angeles courtroom during the historic bellwether trial against Meta and YouTube. Nicki took nearly 600 pages of notes and shares what she witnessed firsthand. Meta and YouTube were found liable for addicting a young woman who began using YouTube at age 6 and Instagram at age 9. The verdict is now setting the precedent for thousands of cases to follow, and families across the country are taking notice. Topics covered in this episode: * How Nicki went from running a global social media marketing business to becoming one of the leading advocates warning parents about platform harm * The story of Kaley, the 20-year-old plaintiff at the center of the bellwether trial, and what she alleged Instagram and YouTube did to her mental health * Internal documents revealed at trial, including employees calling Instagram "a drug" and themselves "basically pushers" * How YouTube's own internal presentation stated its vision was to build a platform that is addictive * Meta's strategy of targeting children under 13 as tweens while publicly claiming kids that age were not allowed on the platform * Adam Mosseri's testimony comparing a teenager's 16-hour daily Instagram use to staying up too late watching Netflix * The specific platform features alleged to drive addiction: the algorithm, infinite scroll, autoplay, push notifications and cosmetic filters * Why these cases are product liability lawsuits and how plaintiffs successfully argued around Section 230 immunity * The school district lawsuits and what Breathitt County Schools is alleging against Meta * What parents can do right now if their child has access to a smartphone or social media If your child has been harmed by social media, you are not alone. To learn more about your legal options, visit: https://www.consumernotice.org/legal/social-media-harm-lawsuit/ [https://www.consumernotice.org/legal/social-media-harm-lawsuit/] To keep up to date with some of the biggest developments in dangerous product lawsuits, sign up for the Drugwatch Newsletter [https://launchthat9039.activehosted.com/f/5]. After highlighting the growing number of Ozempic lawsuits in May, June's issue is set to focus on social media addiction. Resources & Links: * Scrolling 2 Death podcast and parent resources: scrolling2death.com [http://scrolling2death.com] * Tech-Safe Learning Coalition: techsafelearning.org [http://techsafelearning.org] * Nicki Petrossi on Instagram: @scrolling2death [http://instagram.com/scrolling2death] Note: Always consult with health and legal professionals for personalized advice. The information provided reflects current research and advocacy efforts. Nothing in this podcast constitutes legal or medical advice. The opinions of our guests do not necessarily reflect those of Drugwatch.
15 episodes
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