A Los Angeles jury delivered what many online safety advocates are calling a historic moment, finding Meta and YouTube liable for the mental health damage their platforms caused a young California woman. The verdict sent shockwaves through Silicon Valley and drew swift praise from some of the most prominent voices in the online safety space, including Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex, who have spent years advocating for digital safety through Archewell Philanthropies, welcomed the outcome as long overdue. They voiced their support publicly, framing the ruling as a turning point in the broader fight to hold technology companies responsible for the harm their products cause to young users. For a couple who has made online safety one of the defining causes of their post-royal public life, the verdict represented something they had been working toward for years.
The case at the center of it all
The plaintiff, a 20-year-old California woman identified as Kaley G.M., alleged that Instagram and YouTube drew her into addictive behavior while she was still a minor and that the experience contributed to serious mental health consequences, including depressive episodes and suicidal thoughts. She filed suit against four social media companies in 2023, arguing that the platforms had been designed in ways that deliberately exploited young and vulnerable users for engagement. She reached undisclosed settlements with TikTok and Snap earlier this year, and the case against Meta and YouTube moved forward to trial.
The jury ordered the companies to pay $3 million in compensatory damages and $6 million in punitive damages. Meta was assigned responsibility for 70 percent of the total, while YouTube bore the remaining 30 percent. The case was the first in a consolidated group of more than 1,600 similar lawsuits, making it a closely watched bellwether for what could follow. Legal observers noted that a plaintiff victory in this opening case could significantly embolden the thousands of families still waiting for their day in court.
Harry and Meghan respond
The royal couple pointed to a parallel development in New Mexico, where a separate jury ordered Meta to pay $375 million in a child safety case, calling the two rulings back-to-back victories for families and advocates everywhere. Coming within days of each other, the outcomes sent a clear signal that juries across the country are willing to hold major technology companies accountable in ways that courts had not previously affirmed. Harry and Meghan described the verdicts as confirmation that the harm young people have experienced is rooted in how platforms are designed rather than in how families raise their children, a reframing that shifts responsibility squarely onto the companies themselves.
Harry had previously met with families who lost children in tragedies connected to social media use, expressing deep admiration for their willingness to share painful stories publicly and repeatedly in the name of accountability. His involvement alongside Meghan has made the couple two of the most visible public figures tied to the online safety movement, lending both celebrity reach and personal conviction to a cause that advocates say has long struggled to break through.
What comes next
The verdicts may be landmark moments, but the legal battles are far from finished. Meta indicated it is weighing its next steps and pushed back on the findings, arguing that teen mental health is a layered issue that cannot be attributed to a single platform. Google echoed a similar position, defending YouTube as a streaming service built with responsibility in mind rather than a conventional social media platform. Both companies have the resources and legal firepower to mount extended appeals, which means the full impact of these rulings may take years to fully materialize.
Still, for the families who have been fighting these cases for years, the back-to-back rulings represent something significant and long denied. The question now is whether they will open the floodgates for the thousands of similar claims still waiting in the pipeline, and whether lawmakers will use this momentum to push for stronger federal protections for young users online. The conversation about what Big Tech owes its youngest users is no longer hypothetical. A jury has now answered part of that question, and the rest of the answers may not be far behind.

