Meta and Alphabet shares tumble after landmark jury verdict in Los Angeles

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Meta and Alphabet shares tumble after landmark jury verdict in Los Angeles
Meta and Alphabet shares tumble after landmark jury verdict in Los Angeles
Liezl Gambe
Written by Liezl Gambe
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Shares of Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META) fell more than 8% on Thursday following a landmark Los Angeles jury verdict that found the company, alongside Google parent Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) negligent in protecting young users from addictive platform designs.

The ruling has sent shockwaves through the social media sector, with Reddit and Snap also experiencing double-digit percentage declines as investors anticipate a "bellwether" effect on hundreds of similar lawsuits filed by schools, parents, and state attorneys general.

The Los Angeles case centered on whether the tech giants intentionally engineered their applications to keep minors hooked despite knowing the potential dangers to mental health.

While Alphabet shares saw a more moderate decline of approximately 2%, Meta’s sharp drop reflects a compounding legal burden.

Just days prior, on March 24, a separate jury in New Mexico ordered Meta to pay $375 million in penalties after finding the company liable for misleading users about product safety and endangering children.

Both companies have signaled their intent to appeal the Los Angeles verdict.

Meta spokespeople argued that teen mental health is a complex issue that cannot be linked to a single application, while Google representatives sought to differentiate YouTube as a "responsibly built streaming platform" rather than a traditional social media site.

Despite these defenses, the legal momentum appears to be shifting toward increased accountability for algorithmic design and user safety.

The financial impact of these rulings is exacerbated by a massive 2023 lawsuit filed by a coalition of state attorneys general, which mirrors many of the arguments successful in the Los Angeles and New Mexico cases.

As these legal challenges move toward trial, the social media industry faces a fundamental reassessment of its engagement-based business models.

Analysts suggest that the potential for multi-billion dollar aggregate penalties and mandated design changes could significantly alter the long-term growth trajectories of the world’s largest digital platforms.

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