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    1. Home
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    3. >US jury verdicts against Meta, Google tee up fight over tech liability shield
    Finance

    US Jury Verdicts Against Meta, Google Tee up Fight Over Tech Liability Shield

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on March 26, 2026

    5 min read

    Last updated: March 26, 2026

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    US jury verdicts against Meta, Google tee up fight over tech liability shield - Finance news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
    Tags:FinanceLegaltechnology

    Quick Summary

    Two landmark U.S. jury verdicts held Meta and Google liable for platform design harms to children, bypassing Section 230 protections and setting the stage for high-stakes appeals.

    Table of Contents

    • Jury Decisions and the Future of Section 230 Protections
    • Recent Jury Verdicts Against Meta and Google
    • Challenging Section 230: Legal Strategies
    • Meta, Google Claimed Liability Shield
    • Arguments and Judicial Responses
    • Broader Legal Landscape: Ongoing Lawsuits
    • Implications Beyond Social Media
    • Potential Impact on Other Online Platforms
    • Path to the Supreme Court
    • Expert Perspectives on Future Litigation

    US Jury Verdicts Challenge Tech Giants' Liability Shield and Section 230

    Jury Decisions and the Future of Section 230 Protections

    By Diana Novak Jones

    March 26 (Reuters) - Jurors in the first two trials in the U.S. from a growing wave of lawsuits targeting social media firms over harm to children have found Meta and Alphabet's Google liable, potentially teeing up an appeals fight that could reshape how U.S. law shields tech companies from lawsuits.

    Recent Jury Verdicts Against Meta and Google

    In California, a Los Angeles jury on Wednesday found Meta and Google liable for a young woman’s depression and suicidal thoughts after she said she became addicted to Instagram and YouTube at a young age, ordering them to pay a combined $6 million in damages. In a separate New Mexico case, jurors on Tuesday ordered Meta to pay $375 million after finding the company misled users about the safety of its products for young users and enabled the sexual exploitation of children on its platforms.

    Challenging Section 230: Legal Strategies

    The verdicts pierce a legal shield that plaintiffs suing tech companies have long struggled to overcome: Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, a 1996 federal law that generally protects online platforms from liability over user-generated content. In both cases, the plaintiffs sidestepped that hurdle by arguing the companies harmed young users through decisions they made about the platforms' design rather than the content itself.

    “Courts are increasingly trying to distinguish claims about platform functionality or platform conduct from claims that would really just impose liability for third-party speech,” said Gregory Dickinson, an assistant professor at University of Nebraska College of Law who studies the intersection of tech and the law.

    Meta and Google have denied the claims, arguing they have taken actions to protect young people. 

    Meta, Google Claimed Liability Shield

    Arguments and Judicial Responses

    In both cases, Meta urged the judge to dismiss the lawsuit, as did Google in the Los Angeles case, claiming they were shielded from liability by Section 230. The judges rejected the argument, saying the cases could move to trial.

    A Meta spokesperson declined to comment beyond noting that Meta plans to appeal in both cases. Google has said it plans to appeal in the Los Angeles case, but did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Those appeals are almost certain to center on Section 230 – and they could have broad implications.

    Broader Legal Landscape: Ongoing Lawsuits

    Meta, Google, Snapchat parent Snap Inc, and TikTok parent ByteDance are facing thousands of lawsuits in both state and federal court over claims their design choices have led to a mental health crisis for teens and young people. More than 2,400 cases have been centralized before a single judge in California federal court, while thousands of cases are consolidated in California state court. 

    Legal experts say courts have been moving toward a narrower view of Section 230’s liability shield. Several lower courts have ruled that companies’ platform design choices are not protected by the law, but no appellate court has weighed in. Appellate courts, not trial judges, are the ones whose rulings bind other courts.

    Implications Beyond Social Media

    Potential Impact on Other Online Platforms

    An appellate ruling on Section 230 could have implications beyond social media, legal experts say, shaping lawsuits against other online platforms that host content used by children. More than 130 lawsuits are pending in federal court against Roblox Corporation, for example, accusing the popular gaming site of failing to protect users from sexual exploitation. Roblox denies the claims.

    “I think the internet is on trial, not social media,” said Eric Goldman, co-director of the High Tech Law Institute at Santa Clara University School of Law. "If the theories work, they will be deployed elsewhere."

    Path to the Supreme Court

    Appeals in both cases would be heard first by appeals courts at the state level. But they could go to higher courts after that.

    The U.S. Supreme Court has shown a willingness to potentially decide the scope of Section 230. In 2023, the court heard a challenge involving Google's video-sharing platform YouTube, but ultimately sidestepped a ruling on the legal protections for internet companies.

    In 2024, the high court declined to hear a Texas teen's bid to revive his lawsuit accusing Snapchat owner Snap of failing to protect underage users of its social media platform from sexual predators. Two conservative justices - Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch - dissented from that decision, however, warning of further delays in addressing the issue. "Social-media platforms have increasingly used (Section) 230 as a get-out-of-jail free card," they wrote in a dissent.

    Expert Perspectives on Future Litigation

    Meetali Jain, director of the Tech Justice Law Project, which brings litigation against tech companies, said she thinks the U.S. Supreme Court may now be open to weighing in on the scope of Section 230.

    “I personally think that the Supreme Court is even ready for a case like this, for the right case,” Jain said. 

    (Reporting by Diana Novak Jones in Chicago, additional reporting by Andrew Chung in New York, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Rod Nickel)

    Key Takeaways

    • •Los Angeles jury found Meta (Instagram) and Google (YouTube) liable for addiction-linked mental health harm to a young woman, awarding $6 million in damages by attributing culpability to platform design—not user content.
    • •A New Mexico jury found Meta violated state consumer protection law by misleading users and enabling child sexual exploitation, imposing $375 million in penalties by treating violations as design-based harms rather than speech-based content.
    • •These verdicts challenge the traditional scope of Section 230 immunity—highlighting a legal shift where platform functionality, not user-generated content, may open pathways to liability—raising profound implications for future tech litigation.

    Frequently Asked Questions about US jury verdicts against Meta, Google tee up fight over tech liability shield

    1What recent verdicts have been issued against Meta and Google?

    Juries found Meta and Google liable for harm to young users, awarding damages in cases involving depression, suicidal thoughts, and misleading safety claims.

    2What is Section 230 and why is it important in these lawsuits?

    Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act generally protects online platforms from liability over user-generated content. Recent cases challenge its scope by targeting platform design decisions.

    3How did plaintiffs sidestep Section 230 protections in these cases?

    Plaintiffs argued the harm came from platform design choices, not user content, which courts allowed to proceed to trial.

    4What broader implications could the appellate rulings have?

    Appellate rulings could reshape the legal landscape for tech companies and have implications for lawsuits against various online platforms beyond social media.

    5How many lawsuits are currently pending against social media companies over similar claims?

    More than 2,400 cases are centralized in California federal court, with thousands more in state court, targeting social media design choices harming young users.

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