Social media giants, including Meta, have settled the initial lawsuit brought by hundreds of school districts seeking compensation for the mental health crisis among children, which they attribute to social media addiction.This landmark agreement involves the Breathitt County School District, a small, rural Kentucky district whose case was slated for trial next month in federal court in Oakland, California. Selected as a bellwether case among 1,200 similar filings, it served as a crucial test for both sides to gauge the jury's reaction. Meta finalized its settlement with the district on Thursday, following earlier agreements this week with co-defendants TikTok, Snap, and Google’s YouTube.Meta has settled the first of many lawsuits brought by school districts across the country that sued social media companies seeking compensation for costs they say they incurred dealing with children’s social media addiction and mental health harms (AFP/Getty)While the financial terms of these settlements remain undisclosed, the school district had initially sought more than $60 million to fund a 15-year program aimed at addressing mental health and learning issues linked to social media use. Attorneys for the plaintiffs affirmed their commitment, stating their "focus remains on pursuing justice for the remaining 1,200 school districts who have filed cases."The settlements come on the heels of significant court losses for Meta and YouTube earlier this year in social media harm lawsuits in California and New Mexico. In March, a Los Angeles jury found Meta and YouTube liable for designing addictive features, awarding approximately $6 million in damages to a plaintiff, identified by her initials KGM, who claimed social media addiction exacerbated her mental health struggles. Separately, a New Mexico jury determined that Meta’s platforms harm children’s mental health and safety, violating state law.