Two California courtrooms hear how companies may have hooked kids on social media
Briefly

Two California courtrooms hear how companies may have hooked kids on social media
""oh my gosh yall IG is a drug," the user experience specialist allegedly wrote to a colleague, referring to the social media platform Instagram. "We're basically pushers... We are causing Reward Deficit Disorder bc people are binging on IG so much they can't feel reward anymore." The researcher concluded that users' addiction was "biological and psychological" and that company management was keen to exploit the dynamic. "The top down directives drive it all towards making sure people keep coming back for more," the researcher added."
"The conversation was included recently as part of a long-simmering lawsuit in a California-based federal court. Condensing complaints from hundreds of school districts and state attorneys general, including California's, the suit alleges that social media companies knew about risks to children and teens but pushed ahead with marketing their products to them, putting profits above kids' mental health. The suit seeks monetary damages and changes to companies' business practices."
A Meta researcher described Instagram as highly addictive, likening the platform to a drug and warning that users experience biological and psychological addiction. Internal messaging cited company directives that push product designs to keep people returning and raised concerns about causing "Reward Deficit Disorder" from excessive use. A consolidated lawsuit from hundreds of school districts and state attorneys general alleges social media companies knew of risks to children and teens yet continued marketing to them, valuing profit over youth well-being. The cases reveal internal findings and could prompt new regulatory scrutiny and business-practice changes.
Read at LAist
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