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    Home»Innovation»Is Big Tech Finally Out Of Excuses? That’s The $375 Million Question
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    Is Big Tech Finally Out Of Excuses? That’s The $375 Million Question

    InfoForTechBy InfoForTechMarch 29, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    Is Big Tech Finally Out Of Excuses? That’s The 5 Million Question
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    Jury verdicts against Meta and Google just bypassed the Section 230 shield. Is the “addictive design” legal strategy the beginning of the end for Big Tech?

    For decades, Section 230 has been the ultimate get-out-of-jail-free card for Silicon Valley. It was a simple deal: platforms aren’t responsible for what users post.

    But two recent jury verdicts in California and New Mexico just flipped the script, and the implications are massive. By focusing on “product design” rather than “content,” plaintiffs have finally found a way to pierce the digital armor.

    In Los Angeles, jurors awarded $6 million to a young woman who argued that the very architecture of Instagram and YouTube was designed to hook her at the expense of her mental health. Meanwhile, a New Mexico jury slapped Meta with a $375 million penalty for misleading the public about child safety.

    The common thread here isn’t what’s said on the apps, but how the apps themselves are designed.

    This distinction is the “Big Tobacco” moment for technology.

    If a car has a faulty ignition, the manufacturer is liable; if a social media feed is engineered to be addictive, why should the rules be different?

    The industry’s defense has always been that they are mere conduits for speech. These verdicts suggest that juries see them as something else entirely: manufacturers of a potent, sometimes defective, digital product.

    Meta and Google will almost certainly appeal, leaning on the broad protections of federal law. But the tide is turning. These aren’t just isolated losses; they are bellwethers for thousands of pending cases.

    If higher courts uphold the idea that “design” is separate from “content,” the liability shield won’t just have a crack- it might shatter. The era of tech companies operating as untouchable architects of our social fabric is facing its most serious reality check yet.

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