Thursday, March 26

Shares of Meta Platforms fell sharply on Thursday after two consecutive jury verdicts found the company liable for harm linked to its platforms’ impact on young users, raising concerns over growing legal and regulatory risks for the technology sector.

The stock dropped about 8% in trading, while shares of Alphabet, which owns YouTube, declined more than 3%.

On Wednesday in a landmark ruling, a California jury held Meta and Alphabet responsible for harm suffered by a young woman who said she developed depression and suicidal thoughts after becoming addicted to Instagram and YouTube at an early age.

The court ordered the companies to pay a combined $6 million in damages, including $4.2 million from Meta.

Shares of Alphabet, which owns YouTube, declined more than 3% on Thursday.

In a separate case in New Mexico, a jury found Meta liable for failing to protect minors from online threats such as solicitation, explicit content and human trafficking.

The company was ordered to pay $375 million in damages.

Both companies have said they plan to appeal the rulings, maintaining that mental health outcomes cannot be attributed to a single platform.

The rulings come amid increasing scrutiny of social media platforms and their influence on mental health, particularly among teenagers.

Investors react to broader implications of the verdict

While the financial penalties are relatively modest for companies of this size, analysts say the broader implications could be significant.

The case carries significant legal implications because it challenges the long-standing protections afforded to technology companies under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.

The law, enacted in 1996, generally shields online platforms from liability for user-generated content.

However, in this case, plaintiffs successfully argued that the harm stemmed not from content itself but from the platforms’ design choices.

Judges allowed the case to proceed to trial on those grounds, effectively sidestepping the usual legal shield.

This distinction could weaken long-standing legal protections for technology companies and expose them to greater liability in future cases.

According to The Tech Oversight Project, more than 2,000 plaintiffs have filed lawsuits against major social media firms, alleging that they knowingly designed addictive platforms that expose young users to risks including exploitation and self-harm.

Core feature changes may affect engagement and ad revenue

For investors, the main concern is not the immediate financial impact but the potential changes to business models.

Plaintiffs in these cases seek modifications to core platform features, including stricter age verification, fewer notifications, and stronger parental controls.

Such changes could affect user engagement, which underpins advertising revenue for companies like Meta and Alphabet.

A study by the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health estimated that major social media platforms generated nearly $11 billion in advertising revenue from users under the age of 18 in the United States alone in 2022.

In parallel, policymakers are revisiting proposals such as the Kids Online Safety Act, signalling that regulatory pressure may intensify alongside legal challenges.

The developments may also influence how companies deploy artificial intelligence technologies, as a growing number of cases allege harm linked to high engagement with digital platforms and chatbots.

While appeals could limit the immediate fallout, analysts say the steady stream of lawsuits and regulatory scrutiny is likely to weigh on investor sentiment and raise questions about long-term growth prospects for social media companies.

Why the SF vs Meta case in summer is key

Market watchers say the recent verdicts could serve as an early indicator of how courts may approach similar cases in the future.

TD Cowen analyst Paul Gallant said a key test will come later this year in a case scheduled for trial in San Francisco, where multiple state attorneys general have accused Meta of misleading the public about the safety of its products.

“This week’s verdicts aren’t legally binding on future judges and juries, but the SF case vs Meta this summer is key,” wrote Gallant.

“This week’s rulings (especially if replicated in SF this summer) could lead Meta and Google to redesign their services for teens and explore financial settlements with other plaintiffs.”

https://invezz.com/news/2026/03/26/meta-stock-tanks-on-legal-blows-as-deeper-risks-unsettle-investors/

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