It’s unusual for so many states to come together to sue a tech giant for consumer harms. The coordination shows states are prioritizing the issue of children and online safety and combining legal resources to fight Meta, just as states had previously done for cases against Big Tobacco and pharmaceutical companies that were accused of causing the opioid crisis.
“Just like Big Tobacco and vaping companies have done in years past, Meta chose to maximize its profits at the expense of public health, specifically harming the health of the youngest among us,” says Phil Weiser, Colorado’s attorney general.
Lawmakers worldwide have been trying to rein in platforms like Instagram
and TikTok to protect kids. Over the past few years, the United Kingdom, followed by states such as California and Utah, passed laws requiring social media companies to boost privacy and safety protections for minors online. The Utah law, among other things, requires social media apps to turn off notifications by default for minors overnight to reduce interruptions to children’s sleep.
On the national level in the U.S., however, laws to protect the safety of children online have stalled in Congress as tech companies lobby against them.
“We’ve been warning about Meta’s manipulation and harming of young people from its start, and sadly it has taken years to hold it and other companies like Google accountable,” says Chester of the Center for Digital Democracy. “Hopefully justice will be served, but this is why it’s so crucial to have regulations.”