A jury says Meta and Google hurt a kid. What now?

A jury says Meta and Google hurt a kid. What now?

From Decoder with Nilay Patel by The Verge

April 2, 2026 · 51 min

About this episode

The episode discusses landmark verdicts against Meta and Google regarding social media addiction and their implications.

Today, we’re talking about the landmark social media addiction trials that just resulted in two major verdicts against Big Tech — one in California against Meta and Google, and another in New Mexico against just Meta. These are complicated cases with some huge repercussions for both how these platforms work and the very nature of speech in America. So we’ve brought on two heavy hitters: my friend Casey Newton, founder and editor of Platformer and co-host of Hard Fork, as well as Verge senior policy reporter Lauren Feiner, who’s been covering these trials since the beginning. Links: Meta & YouTube found negligent in social media addiction trial | The Verge Meta misled users about its products’ safety, jury decides | The Verge Meta’s legal defeat: a victory for kids, or a loss for everyone | The Verge Can you have child safety and Section 230, too? | Platformer The terrible cost of infinite scroll | The New York Times I watched grieving parents stare down Zuckerberg in court | The Verge Section 230 turns 30 as it faces its biggest tests yet | The Verge Congress considers blowing up internet law | The Verge Sen. Rob Wyden: “Why the internet still needs Section 230” | The Verge How…

People in this episode

Guests: Casey Newton, Lauren Feiner

Topics covered

  • social media addiction
  • Big Tech
  • legal trials
  • child safety
  • Section 230

Keywords

  • Meta
  • Google
  • verdicts
  • California
  • New Mexico

Mentioned in this episode

Products: Meta, Decoder, social media platforms

Places: California, New Mexico, America

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