TikTok 在社交媒体成瘾审判开始前达成和解。
TikTok settles just before social media addiction trial to begin

原始链接: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c24g8v6qr1mo

加州一项关于社交媒体成瘾的里程碑式审判已经开始,TikTok 最近在陪审团选定之前达成和解以避免卷入。此案由一名 20 岁的女性 (KGM) 提起,她声称平台算法助长了她的成瘾并损害了她的心理健康。Meta (Facebook & Instagram) 和 Google (YouTube) 仍然是被告,此前已与 Snapchat 达成和解。 虽然科技公司传统上引用第 230 条来寻求责任保护,但此案的重点是——促进成瘾使用的*设计选择*——算法、通知。KGM 的法律团队旨在证明这些公司将利润置于用户福祉之上,并在审判期间可能公开内部文件。 专家认为,输掉这场官司对社交媒体公司来说可能是“生存威胁”,这将挑战长期以来的法律保护。Meta 坚称致力于青少年安全,但其工具的有效性受到质疑。预计马克·扎克伯格将出庭作证,为他认为社交媒体与青少年心理健康问题之间不存在因果关系这一立场辩护。这场审判反映了全球范围内对社交媒体对年轻人的影响日益增长的担忧和法律行动。

## TikTok 达成社交媒体成瘾诉讼和解 TikTok 最近在庭审即将开始前,达成了一起指控该平台故意成瘾的诉讼和解。这紧随Snap 上周的类似和解,而 Meta (Instagram/Facebook) 和 YouTube 仍在为这些指控辩护。 评论员们讨论了和解金是否真正能弥补损害,并质疑为什么民事诉讼通常是针对强大公司的唯一手段。人们对类似诉讼的可能性以及和解金额缺乏公开信息表示担忧。 许多人认为 TikTok 的算法尤其容易让人上瘾,一位用户详细描述了自己每天在该应用程序上花费 12-14 小时的经历。另一些人指出,研究表明 TikTok 比 YouTube 等平台更具危害性。讨论还涉及 TikTok 关于杰弗里·爱泼斯坦和对唐纳德·特朗普的批评等话题的 alleged 审查问题。此案凸显了人们对社交媒体对心理健康和用户福祉影响日益增长的关注。
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原文

TikTok has reached a settlement to avoid it being involved in a landmark social media addiction trial - a matter of hours before jury selection was due to begin in California.

The plaintiff, a 20-year-old woman identified by the initials KGM, alleges the design of platforms' algorithms left her addicted to social media and negatively affected her mental health.

"The parties are pleased to have reached an amicable resolution of this dispute," the Social Media Victims Law Center said of the TikTok settlement, adding the terms were confidential.

The defendants now include Meta - which owns Instagram and Facebook and YouTube parent Google. Snapchat settled with the plaintiff last week.

The named social media companies have said the plaintiff's evidence falls short of proving they are responsible for alleged harms such as depression and eating disorders.

The case going to trial marks a distinct shift in how the US legal system treats tech firms, which face mounting claims that their products lead to addictive behaviours.

The companies have long argued that Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, passed by Congress in 1996, exempts platforms from liability for what third parties post.

But at issue in this case are design choices about algorithms, notifications and other features that affect how people use their apps.

KGM's attorney, Matthew Bergman, told the BBC the case will be the first time a social media company has been held to account by a jury at trial.

"Unfortunately, there are all too many kids in the United States, the UK, and around the world who are suffering as KGM does because of the dangerous and addictive algorithms that the social media platforms foist on unsuspecting kids," he said.

"These companies are going to have to explain to a jury why their profits were more important than the lives of our young people."

Eric Goldman, a law professor at Santa Clara University, told the BBC that losing these cases in court could pose an existential threat to the social media companies.

But he said it may be difficult for plaintiffs to prove physical harms can be blamed on content publishers.

"The fact that the plaintiffs have been able to sell that idea has opened the door to a whole bunch of new legal questions that the law wasn't really designed to answer," he said.

At trial, jurors are expected to see an array of evidence, including excerpts from internal company documents.

"A lot of what these companies have been trying to shield from the public is likely going to be aired in court," said Mary Graw Leary, a law professor at Catholic University of America.

Meta says it has introduced dozens of tools to support a safer environment for teens online.

"We strongly disagree with these allegations and are confident the evidence will show our longstanding commitment to supporting young people," it said in a statement.

Researchers have previously questioned the effectiveness of Meta's safety interventions - Meta argued the researchers had not properly understood how the tools it had introduced worked.

The companies are expected to argue any asserted harms are caused by third-party users.

One highly-anticipated witness the jury will hear from is Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg, who is due to testify early in the trial.

In 2024, he told US senators "the existing body of scientific work has not shown any causal link between social media and young people having worse mental health outcomes".

During that same hearing, at the prodding of one senator, Zuckerberg apologised to victims and their loved ones who had crowded into the chamber.

Tech executives "are often not good under pressure" said Mary Anne Franks, a law professor at George Washington University.

She said the firms were "very much much hoping" they could avoid having top bosses testify.

The trial comes as the companies face growing scrutiny from families, school districts, and prosecutors worldwide.

Last year, dozens of US states sued Meta, alleging the company misled the public over risks of social media use and had contributed to a youth mental health crisis.

Australia has enacted a social media ban on under-16s, and the UK signalled in January it may follow.

"There is a tipping point when it comes to the harms of social media," Franks said.

"The tech industry has been given deferential treatment - I think we're seeing that start to change."

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