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Opening arguments began this morning in two trials that could change social media forever—and they're not about what kids see online. They're about who decided to make these platforms addictive in the first place. Today in Los Angeles Superior Court, Meta (Instagram/Facebook) and YouTube are defending against claims that their platforms' design features—infinite scroll, auto-play, algorithmic recommendations—deliberately addict children and cause mental health harm. A 19-year-old plaintiff says these features caused her anxiety, body dysmorphia, and suicidal thoughts starting at age 10. Simultaneously, New Mexico's attorney general is suing Meta for failing to protect children from sexual exploitation. THE STAKES: Bellwether trials affecting 1,500+ similar lawsuits Hundreds of school district claims Cases from 40+ state attorneys general Meta warned damages could reach "high tens of billions of dollars" Mark Zuckerberg, Adam Mosseri (Instagram), and Neal Mohan (YouTube) expected to testify THE KEY DIFFERENCE: These lawsuits sidestep Section 230 (which protects platforms from liability for user content) by attacking the design of the platforms themselves—not the content posted on them. They argue companies used "behavioral and neurobiological techniques borrowed from slot machines and exploited by the cigarette industry." WHY THIS MATTERS: This isn't about censoring social media or protecting kids from "bad content." It's about whether companies can knowingly build products designed to addict children, even when internal research shows the harm being caused. FROM MY ANALYSIS: How adolescent brain development makes kids vulnerable to designed addiction (10-12 years old: all gas pedal, no brakes) What internal documents already show companies knew Why Section 230 won't protect them this time The shift from "physical harm" to "behavioral harm" in American regulation What happens if plaintiffs win This could be social media's Big Tobacco moment. Watch to understand what's really happening in that courtroom today. SOURCES: NPR: https://www.npr.org/2026/01/27/nx-s1-... CNBC: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/09/meta-... ABC News: https://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wir... Read the full analysis at TheRipCurrent.com #SocialMedia #Meta #YouTube #BigTech #Regulation