NEWS
YouTube Settles Social Media Addiction Case Ahead of July 27 LA Trial
YouTube settled a Florida teen’s social media addiction case on June 23, ahead of the same plaintiff’s July 27 trial against Meta, Snap, and TikTok.
Google’s YouTube settled a social media addiction case brought by a 15-year-old Florida teen on June 23, ahead of a Los Angeles bellwether trial set to begin on July 27. The terms of the state-court settlement were confidential, the plaintiff’s lawyers said on Tuesday.
YouTube’s exit leaves Meta, Snap, and TikTok as the remaining defendants in the R.K.C. trial, the second in a series overseen by Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Carolyn Kuhl that aims to resolve more than 1,000 similar claims in California. Google’s settlement came after a March 25 jury verdict in the same courthouse, which found YouTube and Meta negligent and awarded $6 million to a 20-year-old California woman, K.G.M., in the first bellwether trial. R.K.C. is a 15-year-old from Florida whose case was selected as the second California bellwether. The settlement removes YouTube from the trial but leaves the same evidence and the same design-defect theory in play against the three remaining defendants.
YouTube Settles the R.K.C. Case on June 23
YouTube spokesperson José Castañeda confirmed the resolution in a written statement on June 23. The teen’s lawyers, John Morgan and Emily Jeffcott, framed the deal as a signal to the rest of the industry. The settlement closed the case before a jury could be seated in Los Angeles.
This matter has been amicably resolved and our focus remains on building age-appropriate products and parental controls that deliver on that promise.
Castañeda’s statement stopped short of disclosing the financial terms. The teen’s lawyers said the settlement was confidential. YouTube’s exit came in the same Los Angeles courthouse where a jury in March had found the platform negligent alongside Meta. Google told the BBC it had built YouTube to give young people safer experiences online for more than a decade, pointing to the 2015 launch of YouTube Kids as evidence. The company did not commit to changing any of the design features the lawsuits target.
R.K.C. alleged that features like infinite scroll and autoplay drove compulsive use that became a type of addiction. The teen said the design caused him anxiety and sleep deprivation, among other issues. YouTube, Meta, Snap, and TikTok were all named in his complaint. The 15-year-old from Florida is the second California bellwether, and his R.K.C. trial in Los Angeles opens July 27 against the three remaining defendants.

The KGM Verdict in March
The case YouTube settled was the second California bellwether trial. The first bellwether, in K.G.M.’s case, ended in March with a $6 million verdict against YouTube and Meta.
Jurors in the K.G.M. case concluded that features including infinite scroll, autoplay, beauty filters, and constant notifications worked together to keep young users glued to their screens. The case centered on the design of the platforms, not the content users posted on them, an approach the plaintiffs’ lawyers used to step around Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. YouTube’s lawyers had called the platform a responsibly built streaming platform, not a social media site. The jury did not adopt that framing in its verdict.
Of the $6 million total, $4.2 million was assigned to Meta and $1.8 million to Google. Lead trial lawyer Mark Lanier held up a 35-foot collage of K.G.M.’s filtered selfies during Zuckerberg’s testimony, a piece of trial theater designed to anchor the engineering of addiction theory. Lanier told jurors during closing arguments that they had to talk to Meta in Meta money, according to the closing arguments in the KGM trial.
The K.G.M. verdict was the first time a court had found Meta and YouTube liable for their platforms’ mental health effects on a specific user. The jury’s design-defect theory survived Google’s argument that YouTube is a streaming service, not a social network. YouTube’s lawyers had pressed that point at trial, and the jury did not accept it. With that precedent in place, YouTube settled before the trial opened. Meta and Google have both said they will appeal.
What Remains of the R.K.C. Trial
YouTube is no longer a defendant in the second California bellwether trial. Meta, Snap, and TikTok remain as defendants in the trial set to begin on July 27 in Los Angeles.
Each of the three remaining defendants is a social network, not a streaming platform, and each faces the same design-defect claim R.K.C. brought against YouTube. Snap and TikTok settled the K.G.M. case before that trial started, but they did not settle R.K.C.’s parallel claims. The trial will run in the same Los Angeles Superior Court under Judge Kuhl, the jurist coordinating the bellwether process. R.K.C.’s case opens on July 27, with the same design-defect theory from K.G.M. on the table.
R.K.C.’s complaint targets the same features that drove the K.G.M. verdict. The teen alleges that infinite scroll, autoplay, recommendation algorithms, push notifications, and beauty filters were engineered to extend use and keep young users online. He says the platforms caused him anxiety and sleep deprivation, among other injuries. The same set of design choices is back in the R.K.C. complaint, with the K.G.M. trial record available as a public reference. R.K.C.’s lawyers, Morgan and Jeffcott, will have the K.G.M. trial transcript at their disposal when their case opens.
The Wider Liability Stream
More than 3,300 lawsuits involving addiction claims are pending in California state court, according to the social media addiction lawsuit numbers tallied this month. Another 2,600 cases are consolidated in California federal court. Judge Kuhl is coordinating more than 1,000 of the state-court claims through the bellwether process.
| Case | Plaintiff | Defendants | Verdict / Status | Damages/Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| KGM v. Meta et al. (LA) | K.G.M., 20, California | Meta, YouTube; Snap/TikTok settled pre-trial | Verdict March 25, 2026 | $6M (split detailed in body) |
| R.K.C. v. Meta et al. (LA) | R.K.C., 15, Florida | YouTube settled; Meta, Snap, TikTok remain | July 27 trial (LA Superior Court) | Confidential with YouTube |
| New Mexico v. Meta | State AG Raúl Torrez | Meta | Verdict March 24, 2026 | Verdict (amount in body) |
| Breathitt County (KY) | School district | Meta, YouTube, Snap, TikTok | Settled May 2026 | $27M (split detailed in body) |
| Federal MDL | U.S. state attorneys general | Meta (lead) | Trial scheduled August 2026 | Pending |
The first federal bellwether, a suit by Breathitt County School District in Kentucky, settled in May. Court records show the four defendants split the total, with Meta paying the largest share at $9 million, Snap and TikTok each paying about $8 million, and YouTube’s parent Alphabet paying more than $2 million, according to the Breathitt County $27M settlement breakdown. The district had been seeking more than $60 million to cover the costs of student mental health services. The case was the first to test the school-district claims and was widely viewed as a bellwether for more than 1,200 similar suits. Breathitt is one of about 1,200 school districts nationwide suing the social media companies, per court filings.
A separate federal bellwether brought by U.S. state attorneys general against Meta is set to go to trial in the same Northern District of California court in August. In March, a New Mexico jury found Meta responsible for failing to protect young users on Instagram and Facebook. Meta has said it will appeal. The federal cases will use the same internal Meta documents made public in the K.G.M. trial.
- 3,300+ lawsuits pending in California state court
- 2,600+ cases consolidated in California federal court
- 1,200+ school district suits nationwide
- 1,000+ similar claims under Judge Kuhl’s coordination
YouTube is the first of the four original R.K.C. defendants to settle the state-court bellwether. The other three remain in the case.
The Design Theory That Beat Section 230
For decades, social media companies have used Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act to dismiss lawsuits over harm to young users. The federal law shields platforms from liability for content their users post. The K.G.M. plaintiffs’ lawyers avoided that defense by focusing on the platforms’ own design choices, not the content.
Lead trial lawyer Mark Lanier described the platforms as a digital casino engineered to make children never put the phone down. K.G.M. testified that she would run to the bathroom at school to check the number of likes her posts had received, so deep was the pull of the design. The case put on display internal Meta documents, including one that said, If we wanna win big with teens, we must bring them in as tweens. Another showed that 11-year-olds were four times as likely to keep coming back to Instagram compared with competing apps, despite the platform’s 13-year-old minimum age. The same set of design features that powered the K.G.M. verdict is now in the R.K.C. complaint.
- Infinite scroll: continuously shows new content without user action
- Autoplay: automatically starts the next video
- Push notifications: pulls users back to the app
- Recommendation algorithms: surfaces content tuned to extend use
- Beauty filters: alters how young users see themselves
Snap and TikTok each settled the K.G.M. case before trial but have not settled R.K.C.’s parallel claims. Their defense, like YouTube’s, hinges on arguing the platforms are not defective products. Meta and Google have both said they will appeal the K.G.M. verdict. The same theory returns to the same Los Angeles courthouse in late July for the R.K.C. trial.
What YouTube Avoided by Settling
YouTube’s June 23 settlement kept a second jury verdict from joining the design-defect tally. The K.G.M. verdict was the first time a court had found Meta and YouTube liable for their platforms’ mental health effects on a specific user, per the BBC. Confidential terms mean the public will not see what Google paid to make the case go away.
YouTube did not admit any defect in the platform’s design. The agreement removes the company from the July 27 trial but leaves Meta, Snap, and TikTok in the jury box. The K.G.M. verdict remains on appeal, and Google’s lawyers continue to argue the streaming-platform defense. The R.K.C. trial on July 27 and the August federal bellwether against Meta by U.S. state attorneys general will be the next public tests of the design-defect theory.
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