Explorer

Facebook, Instagram-Parent Meta Sued By US School Board For Allegedly Addicting Students

The complaint also accuses social media companies of racketeering, gross negligence, conspiracy, and unfair competition.

The San Mateo County Board of Education has filed a complaint against several social media companies, including Meta Platforms, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram. The complaint alleges that these companies are responsible for a mental health crisis among students by addicting them to their platforms. The school board is diverting resources from traditional teaching goals to address psychological problems that have "no historic analogue," including rising suicide rates. The complaint also accuses the companies of racketeering, gross negligence, conspiracy, and unfair competition.

The school board's complaint is similar to a lawsuit filed in January by the Seattle public school district, which also alleged that social media companies designed their platforms to be addictive and to deliver harmful content to adolescents and teens. Other school districts in locales from Florida to Arizona have also filed similar lawsuits, as have scores of individual youths and their parents.

ALSO READ: Meta To Lay Off 10,000 Employees, Close Around 5,000 Additional Open Roles: Zuckerberg

Meta Platforms responded to the complaint by saying it wants teens to be safe online and offers more than 30 safety tools for kids and families, including supervision and age verification technology. The company automatically sets teens' accounts to private when they join Instagram and sends notifications encouraging them to take regular breaks. Meta Platforms also prohibits content that promotes suicide, self-harm or eating disorders, and identifies over 99 per cent of the content it removes or takes action on before it's reported to the company.

ALSO READ: Elon Musk Ridicules Facebook-Parent Meta, Calls It 'Copy Cat' Over Plans To Launch Twitter-Rival

Issues around social media addiction were highlighted at a recent Congressional hearing where TikTok's CEO, Shou Chew, attempted to resist an attempt by US lawmakers and the Biden administration to force the company's Chinese parent company, ByteDance Ltd., to sell its shares of the unit or block it in the US. The parents of a 16-year-old boy who died by suicide after using TikTok were present at the hearing. The couple is suing ByteDance, alleging that TikTok sent their son more than 1,000 videos related to suicide, hopelessness and self-harm.

The case is being heard in the US District Court for the Northern District of California (Oakland) and is titled San Mateo County Board of Education v. YouTube LLC, 23-cv-01108.

Top Headlines

'Have To Fix The Country First': Trump Says No Election In Venezuela In Next 30 Days
'Have To Fix The Country First': Trump Says No Election In Venezuela In Next 30 Days
Objectionable Slogans Raised Against Modi, Shah At JNU Against Umar Khalid's Bail Rejection; Video Viral
Objectionable Slogans Raised Against Modi, Shah At JNU Against Umar Khalid's Bail Rejection
Hindu Trader Killed In Bangladesh Again: Second Death In 24 Hours Raises Alarm
Hindu Trader Killed In Bangladesh Again: Second Death In 24 Hours Raises Alarm
'I Am Still President': Maduro Says He Was 'Kidnapped'; US Rejects Regime Change In Venezuela
'I Am Still President': Maduro Says He Was 'Kidnapped'; US Rejects Regime Change In Venezuela

Videos

Punjab News: AAP Leader Shot Dead During Wedding in Amritsar
Maharashtra News: Pune Man Dies by Suicide Alleging Harassment by NCP Candidate
Mumbai News: Thackeray Brothers Hold Joint Rally After Manifesto Release
Tamil Nadu News: Amit Shah Targets DMK, BJP Launches Poll Campaign in Pudukkottai
Delhi News: Supreme Court to Decide on Bail Plea of Delhi Riots Accused Umar Khalid, Sharjeel Imam

Photo Gallery

25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Embed widget