YouTube, Snap settle school district's social media addiction claims


Teenagers pose for a photo while holding smartphones in front of a Youtube logo in this illustration taken September 11, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

May 15 (Reuters) - Alphabet's YouTube and Snap have reached settlements in the first case set for ⁠trial in litigation seeking to force social media platforms to cover the costs school ‌districts incur to combat a youth mental health crisis they say the companies fueled.

The settlements were detailed in court filings on Friday in federal court in Oakland, California, and resolve claims by a Kentucky school district that is still due to ​take Facebook and Instagram parent Meta Platforms and TikTok to trial ⁠on June 15.

Terms of the settlements ⁠with Breathitt County School District in rural Eastern Kentucky were not disclosed.

"This matter has been amicably resolved ⁠and ‌our focus remains on building age-appropriate products and parental controls that deliver on that promise," a YouTube spokesperson said in a statement.

Snap, the parent company of Snapchat, did not respond to ⁠a request for comment.

More than 3,300 lawsuits involving addiction claims ​are pending in California state ‌court against the social media companies. Another 2,400 cases brought by individuals, municipalities, states and ⁠school districts have been ​centralized in California federal court.

In a landmark trial, a Los Angeles jury on March 25 found Meta and Alphabet's Google negligent for designing social media platforms that are harmful to young people. It awarded a combined $6 million ⁠to a 20-year-old woman who said she became addicted to ​social media as a child.

The companies have denied the allegations and say they take extensive steps to keep teens and young users safe on their platforms.

Breathitt is one of more than a thousand school districts ⁠suing the social media companies over claims they caused a mental health crisis among students and then saddled schools with the fallout.

The school district has been seeking over $60 million to cover the costs of counteracting social media's impact on students’ mental health and to fund a 15-year mental health program to ​abate the problem.

It also seeks a court order requiring the companies to ⁠modify their platforms to reduce addictive features.

Its case is a bellwether, or test case, for over a ​thousand similar school districts' lawsuits.

Judges and attorneys often use bellwether verdicts ‌to assess the potential value of remaining claims ​and guide settlement talks. Typically, several bellwether cases are tried before reaching a broader resolution.

(Reporting by Diana Novak Jones in Chicago and Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Tom Hogue)

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