TechBriefly
  • Tech
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Science
  • Geek
  • How to
  • About
    • About TechBriefly
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • Languages
      • 中文 (Chinese)
      • Dansk
      • Deutsch
      • Español
      • English
      • Français
      • Nederlands
      • Italiano
      • 日本语 (Japanese)
      • 한국인 (Korean)
      • Norsk
      • Polski
      • Português
      • Pусский (Russian)
      • Suomalainen
      • Svenska
No Result
View All Result
TechBriefly
Home Business Corporate
Snap pays millions to settle teen addiction lawsuit ahead of trial

Snap pays millions to settle teen addiction lawsuit ahead of trial

Emre ÇıtakbyEmre Çıtak
21 January 2026
in Corporate, Business
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Social media company Snap has settled a lawsuit alleging social media addiction and mental health issues caused by its platform, multiple outlets reported. The settlement, announced Tuesday in the California Superior Court in Los Angeles County, preceded a scheduled trial.

The lawsuit was filed by a 19-year-old, identified as K.G.M. in court documents. The suit accused the social media app of designing algorithms and features that contributed to addiction and impaired mental health. The terms of the settlement were not disclosed.

Meta, YouTube, and TikTok are also named in the lawsuit, though no settlement has been reached with these platforms. Snap remains a defendant in other similar social media addiction cases.

Documents from ongoing cases reveal that Snap employees previously raised concerns about mental health risks to teenagers, dating back at least nine years. Snap stated these examples were “cherry-picked” and taken out of context.

Plaintiffs in these cases draw comparisons to litigation against tobacco companies in the 1990s, alleging platforms concealed potential harms from users. They argue that features such as infinite scroll, auto video play, and algorithmic recommendations compel continuous app engagement, leading to depression, eating disorders, and self-harm, according to The New York Times.

Snap CEO Evan Spiegel was scheduled to testify, marking a potential first instance of a social media company facing a jury in an addiction lawsuit. No platform has lost such a case at trial to date. The remaining case against Meta, TikTok, and YouTube is scheduled to proceed with jury selection beginning next Monday, January 27. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is expected to testify.

Legal experts predict that if plaintiffs prevail, these cases could result in multimillion-dollar settlements and mandate product redesigns. However, the companies assert that design choices, including algorithmic recommendations, push notifications, and infinite scroll, resemble newspaper editorial decisions and are protected under the First Amendment.


Featured image credit

Tags: featuredsnap
ShareTweet
Emre Çıtak

Emre Çıtak

Emre’s love for animals made him a veterinarian, and his passion for technology made him an editor. Making new discoveries in the field of editorial and journalism, Emre enjoys conveying information to a wide audience, which has always been a dream for him.

Related Posts

SpaceX targets .5 trillion valuation with potential July 2026 IPO

SpaceX targets $1.5 trillion valuation with potential July 2026 IPO

22 January 2026
Meta unleashes Threads ads globally across 400 million users

Meta unleashes Threads ads globally across 400 million users

22 January 2026
Türkiye competition authority raids Temu offices

Türkiye competition authority raids Temu offices

21 January 2026
Nvidia shares dip as Inventec warns of H200 chip delays in China

Nvidia shares dip as Inventec warns of H200 chip delays in China

21 January 2026

LATEST

Blue Origin’s New Glenn-3 mission to deploy AST SpaceMobile’s BlueBird 7

Anthropic redesigns hiring tests after Claude 4.5 “aces” human interview

NexPhone debuts as the first “triple-OS” smartphone for power users

Google Photos v7.59 may kill the “Modify” button in sharing overhaul

Snapchat gives parents trust signals to vet teen friend connections

Spotify launches Prompted Playlists to let users steer the algorithm

Amazon expands healthcare portfolio with new generative Health AI tool

What to expect at Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2026

SpaceX targets $1.5 trillion valuation with potential July 2026 IPO

YouTube enables creators to generate AI likenesses for Shorts

TechBriefly

© 2021 TechBriefly is a Linkmedya brand.

  • Tech
  • Business
  • Science
  • Geek
  • How to
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Contact
  • | Network Sites |
  • Digital Report
  • LeaderGamer

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Tech
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Science
  • Geek
  • How to
  • About
    • About TechBriefly
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • Languages
      • 中文 (Chinese)
      • Dansk
      • Deutsch
      • Español
      • English
      • Français
      • Nederlands
      • Italiano
      • 日本语 (Japanese)
      • 한국인 (Korean)
      • Norsk
      • Polski
      • Português
      • Pусский (Russian)
      • Suomalainen
      • Svenska