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Jury begins deliberations in landmark New Mexico trial over children’s safety risks on Meta

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) 鈥 A jury began deliberations Monday in a landmark trial in New Mexico where social media conglomerate is accused of misleading its users about how safe its platforms are for children.

Meta’s attorneys dispute the claims and say provides built-in protections for teenagers and weeds out but that some potentially harmful gets past its safety nets for some users.

Jurors heard closing arguments after six weeks of testimony from scores of witnesses that included local teachers, psychiatric experts, state investigators, top Meta officials and whistleblowers who left the company.

The case in New Mexico state court is among the first to reach trial in a wave of litigation involving social media platforms and their impacts on children.

New Mexico prosecutors 鈥 which owns Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp 鈥 of prioritizing profits over safety in violation of state consumer protection laws. They have raised concerns about the safety of complex algorithms, and a variety of messaging features and settings.

鈥淚t鈥檚 clear that young people are spending too much time on Meta’s products, they鈥檝e lost control,鈥 prosecution attorney Linda Singer told the jury in closing statements. 鈥淢eta knew that and it didn鈥檛 disclose it.鈥

Prosecutor says trial evidence shows Meta failed to enforce its minimum user age

Singer said testimony and evidence at trial showed Meta鈥檚 algorithms had been recommending sensational and harmful content to teenagers, while alleging that the company failed to truly enforce its minimum user age of 13.

鈥淭he safety issues that you鈥檝e heard about in this case, weren鈥檛 mistakes. …. They were a product of a corporate philosophy that chose growth and engagement over children鈥檚 safety,鈥 Singer said. 鈥淎nd young people in this state and around the country have borne the cost.鈥

Meta attorney Kevin Huff on Monday highlighted witness testimony about Meta’s investments in the safety on its platforms, describing automated features and roles dedicated to safety.

鈥淢eta has built innovative, automated tools to protect people,鈥 he said. 鈥淢eta has 40,000 people working to make its apps as safe as possible.”

But he added that Meta’s systems aren’t perfect: “No one can, with billions of pieces of content every day, even the best system, cannot catch all of it.鈥

He said the company鈥檚 enforcement of minimum age limits are hamstrung by U.S. government restrictions on collecting young children鈥檚 data.

Meta attorney insists the company has disclosed risks of its platforms

Huff told the jury that the company 鈥渄isclosed to the world that its safeguards are not perfect, and that some bad content and bad actors get onto its service.鈥

鈥淐ommon sense also says that parents and teens know that there is bad content on the internet, and on Facebook and Instagram specifically,鈥 he added. But Huff noted the social media company has disclosed risks of its platforms in its user agreements, website, ads and on television.

鈥淲herever it could get its message out, Meta was disclosing risk to the public,鈥 Huff said.

Singer urged jurors to impose a civil penalty that could exceed $2 billion against Meta, based on the maximum $5,000 penalty per violation on two counts of consumer protection violations, and an estimated 208,700 monthly users of Meta platforms under the age of 18 in New Mexico. The violations include 鈥渦nconscionable鈥 trade practices.

鈥淥ver the course of a decade Meta has failed over and over again to act honestly and transparently, failed to act to protect young people in this state,鈥 Singer said. 鈥淚t is up to you to finish this job.”

Huff called the state鈥檚 request for penalties 鈥渁 shocking number鈥 and said prosecutors failed to provide any examples of teenagers who chose to use Instagram because of a false understanding of its risks.

鈥淓ven though teens are aware of the risks, they continue to use Instagram because they enjoy Instagram,鈥 Huff said.

A second phase of the trial will follow with a judge deciding whether Meta created a public nuisance and should be on the hook financially to fund programs to address alleged harms to children.

Company’s attorneys say the state has cherry-picked evidence to support its case

Attorney General Ra煤l Torrez filed suit in 2023, accusing Meta of creating a marketplace and 鈥渂reeding ground鈥 for predators who target children for sexual exploitation and failing to disclose what it knew about those harmful effects. State investigators created social media accounts posing as children to document online sexual solicitations and the response from Meta.

Meta attorneys accuse prosecutors of cherry-picking evidence and conducting a shoddy investigation.

Meta executives emphasized at trial that the company continuously improves safety and addresses compulsive social media use without infringing on free speech or censoring users.

But the prosecution on Monday said that public assurances about safety disclosures from Meta executives including founder Mark Zuckerberg and Instagram head Adam Mosseri often didn’t square with internal studies and communications at the company.

鈥淚t was included in Meta鈥檚 internal research — again this was research that didn鈥檛 get disclosed by Meta — one-in-three teens experienced problematic use,鈥 Singer said. “They knew these kids were struggling with problematic use 鈥 again, addiction.鈥

The jury is assembled from residents of Santa Fe County, including the politically progressive state capital city.

Limits on liability for tech companies

Tech companies have been protected from liability for material posted on their social media platforms under , a 30-year-old provision of the U.S. Communications Decency Act, as well as a First Amendment shield.

Prosecutors say New Mexico is not seeking to hold Meta accountable for content on its platforms, but rather its role in pushing out that content through complex algorithms that proliferate material that can be addictive and harmful to children.

In California, a jury already is sequestered in deliberations on for harms caused to children using their platforms. The bellwether case could impact how thousands of similar lawsuits against social media companies are likely to play out.

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