The verdict marks the end of a five-week trial on the addictive nature of social media platforms.

The companies were ordered to pay $3 million in damages to a 20-year-old woman who brought the lawsuit.

A New Mexico jury finds Meta liable for harming children's mental health, marking a significant shift in accountability for tech companies.

The verdict marks the first time a US state has successfully sued the social media giant over child safety issues.

The jury hit Meta with a $375 million verdict.

A jury has found Meta and YouTube liable in a first-of-its-kind lawsuit that aimed to hold social media platforms responsible for harm to children using their services.

The trial was one of several that social media companies face this year and beyond.

The verdict marks the end of a five-week trial on the addictive nature of social media platforms.

A jury reached a verdict in the L.A. trial focused on Meta and YouTube, a case that experts have characterized as social media's "Big Tobacco" moment.

Six-week trial including whistleblowers and top executives at Meta and YouTube was first of its kind to go to trial

Meta and Google were found liable in a landmark trial over whether social media apps like Instagram and YouTube are designed to get children addicted.

Landmark trial “shakes Big Tech to its core”; complaint argued companies knowingly designed addictive products that exposed children to harm.

The jury found Meta liable for $4.2 million in damages and Google for $1.8 million, small amounts for two of the world's most valuable companies.

A California jury has found Meta and YouTube liable for negligently designing addictive social media platforms that harm children, in a landmark verdict that could have lasting…

The ruling could be the beginning of the end of social media as we know it, writes the BBC Technology Editor Zoe Kleinman.

As many organizations celebrate outcome, some are skeptical as to what it means for privacy protections

The landmark decision in an LA court may go beyond immediate impacts on defendants Meta and YouTube.