Landmark verdicts put Meta’s “addiction machine” platforms on trial
好的,我现在需要帮用户总结一篇文章,控制在100字以内,而且不需要用“文章内容总结”这样的开头。首先,我得仔细阅读文章,理解主要内容。 文章主要讲的是Meta最近遇到了两个法律挫折。一个是新墨西哥州的陪审团判决Meta支付3.75亿美元,因为他们在Instagram和Facebook上误导家长,声称平台安全,但实际上孩子接触到危险内容。另一个是洛杉矶的陪审团判决Meta和Google对平台设计负有责任,导致儿童上瘾。 接下来,我需要提取关键信息:Meta被起诉、两个案件、涉及儿童安全、赔偿金额、未来可能有更多的诉讼。然后把这些信息浓缩成简洁的句子。 还要注意字数限制,确保不超过100字。可能需要合并一些信息,比如把两个案件合并成一句话,同时提到赔偿金额和未来的挑战。 最后检查一下是否符合用户的要求:中文、简洁、不使用特定开头。这样应该就能满足用户的需求了。 </think> Meta因涉及儿童安全问题面临两起重大法律诉讼。新墨西哥州陪审团裁定Meta需支付3.75亿美元赔偿金,因其误导家长称社交媒体平台安全,而实际上儿童易接触危险内容。洛杉矶陪审团则认定Meta与Google平台设计导致儿童成瘾,称其为"成瘾机器"。这两起案件标志着更多针对Meta的法律挑战即将来临。 2026-3-26 10:43:1 Author: www.malwarebytes.com(查看原文) 阅读量:22 收藏

Meta faced two major legal setbacks this week as courts in New Mexico and California both found the company liable for harm to children.

A New Mexico jury just ordered Meta to pay $375 million for misleading parents about child safety on Instagram and Facebook. Jurors found the company violated consumer protection laws by claiming its platforms were safe while knowing they exposed children to danger.

A day later, a Los Angeles jury found Meta and Google liable in a landmark case over platform design. The case, brought by a young woman known as Kaley, accused both companies of getting her addicted to their products as a child, calling their platforms “addiction machines.”

New Mexico wins three-year lawsuit

New Mexico sued Meta in 2023 for violating its Unfair Practices Act, claiming the company’s algorithms were pushing sexual content to kids.

Prosecutors said this wasn’t random. They argued that Meta’s algorithms steered kids towards explicit content. The complaint said that Meta had:

“Proactively served and directed them to a stream of egregious, sexually explicit images through recommended users and posts—even where the child has expressed no interest in this content.”

The lawsuit also alleged that the platform made it easier for adults to contact and exploit minors, including grooming and solicitation.

During the seven-week trial, jurors saw internal memos and heard from several witnesses including Arturo Béjar, a software engineer who quit the company in 2021. He said a stranger propositioned his young daughter on Instagram.

Meta’s internal research presented in court showed that 16% of Instagram users saw unwanted nudity or sexual content in a single week. Documents said Meta knew about the harm.

When announcing the legal win, New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez said:

“Meta executives knew their products harmed children, disregarded warnings from their own employees, and lied to the public about what they knew. Today the jury joined families, educators, and child safety experts in saying enough is enough.”

New Mexico prosecutors also found employee messages discussing how Mark Zuckerberg’s 2019 announcement of end-to-end encryption on Facebook Messenger would hamper their ability to catch predators. Meta has said it plans to remove end-to-end encryption from Instagram private messages, a move linked to ongoing concerns about detecting abuse on the platform.

Meta’s lawyers said that the company was protecting kids and removing harmful content. The company offers Teen Account protections and parental alerts. Still, they acknowledged that harmful content can slip through. 

The $375m figure in the New Mexico case was calculated from thousands of individual violations, each counting separately toward the penalty, and Meta is set to appeal.

In the LA case, jurors recommended $3m in compensatory damages to Kaley, along with $3m in punitive damages. Both Meta and Google “acted with malice, oppression, or fraud” in their platform operations, the jury found.

On its own, even the $375m penalty is not especially financially damaging to Meta, which made just over $60bn in net income last year. But these two cases are the first of many forthcoming legal challenges the company will face.

The Kaley case was the first of several “bellwether” cases, which are trials that could set the pace for hundreds or thousands of similar cases. Over 2,400 cases making similar claims against Meta have been consolidated in California. The next bellwether case, RKC vs Meta, will begin in the summer.

Dozens of state attorneys general have also sued Meta, accusing it of deliberately designing its platform with addictive properties that harm young people.

The scrutiny of the algorithm in both cases might also make it more difficult in future for big tech companies to rely on Section 230. The 30-year-old legislation has long protected tech platforms from the actions of users on its platform. That didn’t protect Meta from criticism over how it engineered its own platform.

Beyond the potential for much larger penalties, these cases are important because state legislators have legally shown Meta’s platforms knew about harm to children while telling parents everything was fine. That could be especially problematic for a company focused on growing (or at least maintaining) its engagement numbers.


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About the author

Danny Bradbury has been a journalist specialising in technology since 1989 and a freelance writer since 1994. He covers a broad variety of technology issues for audiences ranging from consumers through to software developers and CIOs. He also ghostwrites articles for many C-suite business executives in the technology sector. He hails from the UK but now lives in Western Canada.


文章来源: https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/news/2026/03/landmark-verdicts-put-metas-addiction-machine-platforms-on-trial
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