Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg faced intense scrutiny this week in a Los Angeles courtroom, where he denied allegations that Instagram intentionally targets children under 13. The trial, part of a global reckoning over social media's impact on youth mental health, centers on claims that Meta prioritized profits over child safety. 💻⚖️
"We Don’t Allow Under-13s" vs. Internal Docs
Zuckerberg clashed with plaintiff’s lawyer Mark Lanier over a 2018 internal Instagram presentation titled: "If we want to win big with teens, we must bring them in as tweens." Lanier argued this contradicts Meta’s public stance, while Zuckerberg called it a "mischaracterization." The CEO maintained Meta has "age limits" but admitted verifying user ages is challenging. 📉
Teen Screen Time Under Microscope
Emails revealed Zuckerberg once pushed teams to boost Instagram usage by "double-digit percentage points" – a stark contrast to his 2024 congressional testimony about not maximizing screen time. Meta’s lawyers countered that the plaintiff’s mental health struggles stem from childhood trauma, not social media. 🧠💔
Global Ripple Effects
This case could set precedents for thousands of lawsuits against Meta, Google, and TikTok. With Australia banning under-16s from social platforms and Florida restricting under-14s, the trial highlights growing pressure on Big Tech to address youth safety. 🌐🔒
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Meta's Zuckerberg denies at trial that Instagram targets kids
cgtn.com






