Meta, TikTok, Snap, YouTube Pay $27 Million to Settle Kentucky School Addiction Lawsuit
The settlement establishes a financial benchmark for the wave of over a thousand pending school district lawsuits against social media companies, without requiring any admission of fault or platform changes.
Reporting from 1 sources: GIGAZINE.
A lawsuit filed by the Breathitt County school district in Kentucky, alleging that social media platforms caused student addiction and harmed the learning environment, has been settled before trial. The total payout across four companies is $27 million (approximately 43 billion yen). Meta, which owns Instagram and Facebook, will pay $9 million. TikTok and Snap will each pay $8 million. Google, which operates YouTube, will pay $2.01 million, a significantly lower amount, and has also agreed to provide special training on Google Classroom and other products. The settlement does not require the companies to admit liability or make changes to their platforms. The case is one of roughly 1,300 similar lawsuits filed by school districts across the United States, with potential total payouts estimated at $400 billion if all are resolved similarly.
The Breathitt County school district in Kentucky argued that social media platforms disrupted students' learning environments, created an addiction crisis, and strained school budgets. The lawsuit targeted Meta (Instagram, Facebook), TikTok, Snap (Snapchat), and Google (YouTube). While YouTube, TikTok, and Snap had previously agreed to settle, Meta held out until this final round. Reuters and Bloomberg reported the specific payout breakdown: Meta $9 million, TikTok and Snap $8 million each, and Google $2.01 million. Google's lower payment is accompanied by an agreement to provide special training on its education platform Google Classroom and related products. The reason for the disparity was not disclosed. Meta, Google, and Snap each issued statements saying the matter was resolved amicably and that they remain committed to user safety tools. TikTok and the plaintiffs' attorneys did not respond to Reuters' requests for comment. The settlement comes as over 1,300 school districts nationwide have filed similar claims, and analysts cited by sources suggest the total liability for the companies could reach $400 billion if all cases are resolved on comparable terms.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.