The case of the young KGM
YouTube joined Meta in appealing a court ruling that describes social networks as addictive and designed to hook minors without considering their well-being. Attorneys for the video platform filed their notice Monday in Los Angeles County Superior Court, days after Meta did the same.
The case revolves around a 20-year-old young woman, identified only by her initials KGM (Kaley), who claims that becoming addicted to social media since childhood aggravated her mental health problems. The jury found that both YouTube (owned by Google) and Meta acted negligently and that this was a substantial factor in the damage.
The compensation awarded was $3 million in compensatory damages and another $3 million in punitive damages. The plaintiff’s lead attorney, Mark Lanier, stated following Meta’s appeal that they hope the appeals court will “continue the careful application of the law in this case, upholding the trial court’s verdict.”
“These are standard motions for this case to move forward,” Google spokesman José Castañeda said in announcing YouTube’s appeal.
Legal arguments and platform design
During the five-week trial, YouTube maintained that it is not a social network, but rather a video-sharing and streaming platform. Both Google and Meta questioned whether the tests invaded the protections of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which protects technology companies from content published by third parties.
In contrast, the young woman’s lawyers focused on design features such as autoplay, which they say encourage prolonged, less intentional use.
The KGM case is unprecedented and its outcome could influence thousands of similar lawsuits against technology companies. TikTok and Snapchat, originally sued, settled out of court before trial. Judge Carolyn B. Kuhl had already denied Google and Meta’s motions for a new trial.




