Wednesday, June 3, 2026 - Several major social media companies have agreed to pay approximately $27 million to settle a lawsuit brought by a school district in Kentucky that accused their platforms of contributing to a student mental health crisis.
Court documents reviewed by AFP show that Meta, the parent
company of Facebook and Instagram, will pay $9 million under the settlement.
Snap Inc., which owns Snapchat, and ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok,
will each contribute $8 million.
Meanwhile, Google will pay about $2 million in cash and
provide training, software licences and support services valued at roughly
$900,000.
The lawsuit was filed by the Breathitt County School
District, a rural district in eastern Kentucky. The case had been selected as a
test case among more than 1,200 similar lawsuits filed by school districts
across the United States.
The district sought more than $60 million to fund a 15-year
mental health programme and cover costs associated with addressing issues it
linked to social media use, including sleep disruption, emotional distress and
student conflicts.
The case was scheduled to go to trial later this month in
Oakland, California, before the companies agreed to settle. As part of its
settlement package, Google will provide educational support services, including
an on-site professional development coach, a three-year licence for its AI
education software, a four-year social-emotional learning programme and
technical support for Google Workspace tools.
None of the companies admitted wrongdoing as part of the
agreements. Legal observers say the settlements could increase pressure on the
companies to resolve the hundreds of similar cases still pending before Yvonne
Gonzalez Rogers, the federal judge overseeing the broader litigation.
The settlements come amid growing legal scrutiny of social
media platforms. In March, a Los Angeles jury found Meta and Google liable in a
case involving claims that Instagram and YouTube were designed in ways that
contributed to addictive use, a decision that could influence future lawsuits
involving social media and mental health.

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