- TikTok exits the case at the eleventh hour, while Meta and Google remain defendants as the trial begins in California.
- The lawsuit targets addictive product design features rather than user-generated content, testing long-standing legal protections for tech platforms.
What happened: the settlement was reached just hours before jury selection, allowing the case to proceed against Meta, Google and other platforms
TikTok has settled a high-profile lawsuit over alleged social media addiction only hours before jury selection was due to begin in California. The last-minute agreement removes TikTok from the case, but leaves Meta, Google and several other social media companies facing trial.
The claim was brought by a 20-year-old woman, identified by her initials in court documents, who argues that she became addicted to social media platforms from a young age. She alleges that design features used by major platforms contributed to serious mental health problems later in her life.
Although the terms of TikTok’s settlement have not yet been disclosed, the timing of the decision highlights the legal and reputational risks of the case. The proceedings against the remaining defendants will continue, and the jury is expected to hear evidence about the design of social media products.
Unlike earlier lawsuits against technology companies, this case does not centre on specific posts or harmful content shared by users. Instead, it examines algorithms, notifications and engagement mechanisms that are designed to keep users scrolling, watching and interacting for as long as possible — particularly younger users.
The remaining companies have denied wrongdoing and are expected to argue that there is no clear causal link between their platforms and conditions such as depression or eating disorders. They maintain that any harm is linked to user behaviour and third-party content, not the platforms’ underlying design.
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Why it’s important
The case is significant for the tech industry because it challenges the idea that “the legal protection of online platforms also covers how platforms are built.”. A court ruling that a product’s design is not legally protected could lead to a new round of litigation.
Moreover, the trial comes amid growing political and regulatory scrutiny. In the United States, several states have filed lawsuits over how social media companies describe risks to young users. Internationally, governments have moved more quickly – Australia has announced a ban on the use of social media by minors under the age of 16, and Britain has said it will tighten enforcement of cybersecurity regulations.
For social media companies, the case has implications far beyond a lawsuit. The results could affect how platforms design user interaction, defend their business models and how courts view arguments about user well-being. Even before the verdict was announced, tiktok’s choice to settle suggested that the industry’s legal base may be shifting.
