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Meta_and_YouTube_Accused_of_Using_Addictive_Features_to_Exploit_Youth_FOMO

Meta and YouTube Accused of Using Addictive Features to Exploit Youth FOMO

Several major social media platforms, including Meta, YouTube, TikTok, and Snap, are facing legal challenges from hundreds of school districts across the United States. The lawsuits allege that these companies intentionally designed their products to be addictive, contributing to a mental health crisis among youth. By utilizing features that exploit psychological triggers like the fear of missing out, the platforms are accused of causing widespread anxiety, depression, and sleep deprivation in students. In response, the companies point to their safety tools and mental health resources designed for younger users.

  • Hundreds of U.S. school districts have initiated legal action against social media giants regarding their product design.
  • Plaintiffs argue that features such as infinite scrolling and constant notifications are engineered to maximize engagement by exploiting psychological vulnerabilities.
  • The lawsuits claim that these addictive designs have led to a significant increase in mental health issues, including anxiety and depression, among adolescents.
  • Internal evidence presented in these cases suggests some companies were aware of the potential harms their platforms posed to minors while developing engagement features.
  • Social media companies defend their practices by highlighting existing parental controls and resources intended to support user well-being.
  • The litigation specifically targets the platforms’ underlying architecture and algorithms rather than the specific content posted by third-party users.

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Comments

12 responses to “Meta and YouTube Accused of Using Addictive Features to Exploit Youth FOMO”

  1. Check y'all's gas out…..

    Full tanks only last half the usual amount of driving time……

    Water down gas…..?????

  2. 2:29 Hmmm then why did they go after Napster and sue a bunch of kids years ago

  3. 0:45 – six million.
    0:57 – Bellwether case.
    1:40 – Section 230.
    4:30 – Anna LMK

  4. Finally it looks like the EU has realised immigration might be bad. Once it has begun to affect the elites life’s which it has they’re changing their minds and want to remove these scavengers asap. 😂 ICE in Europe 😂

  5. What social media feed?

  6. Why are you talking with your hands in such a huge chair?

  7. This is the very definition of laughing all the way to the bank, you contribute to the abuse by using social media to make money…

  8. 10:37 Coffee manufacturers are next 😅

  9. Hogwash!

    Like we had "satanic panic" experts in the 70s and "memory repression experts" in the 90s – turned out to be social hysteria farces.

    The idea of a literal “dopamine dependency” or “dopamine addiction” has been largely debunked as a pop‑psychology oversimplification, but dopamine still plays a well‑established role in motivation, reinforcement, and certain addictions. [1][2][3]

    ### What is debunked
    – **“Dopamine addiction” as a standalone disorder**: There is no scientific evidence that people can become addicted to dopamine itself; you cannot “detox” or “reset” dopamine levels in the way “dopamine fasting” or “dopamine detox” trends claim. [1][4][5]
    – **“Dopamine = pleasure chemical”**: Dopamine is more about *anticipation*, motivation, and learning what to repeat than directly causing pleasure or euphoria; oversimplified “pleasure chemical” narratives are now widely regarded as misleading. [2][3]

    ### What is still valid
    – **Dopamine’s role in addiction**: Dopamine circuits are involved in substance‑use disorders and some behavioral addictions (e.g., gambling), where excessive or repeated activation can contribute to compulsive patterns, but dopamine is only one part of a larger neurobiological and social picture. [6][3][7]
    – **“Dopamine theories” under revision**: Many experts now criticize overly mechanistic “just dopamine” models of addiction and mental disorders, arguing that we need richer, multi‑factor frameworks (learning, stress, environment, social connection). [6][2][8]

    In short: the vogue “dopamine dependency” / “dopamine detox” lingo has been debunked, but dopamine remains a legitimate, albeit nuanced, player in addiction and motivated behavior. [1][2][3]

    Citations:
    [1] Debunking Dopamine Addiction: Separating Myths from Science https://recovered.org/blog/dopamine-addiction-fact-or-clickbait
    [2] Opinion | A 'Dopamine Fast' Will Not Save You From Addiction https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/13/opinion/addiction-dopamine-brain-chemistry.html
    [3] Dopamine and Addiction: Separating Myths and Facts – Healthline https://www.healthline.com/health/dopamine-addiction
    [4] News: Debunking the Dopamine Detox Trend (The Scientist) https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/search/research-news/20268
    [5] Debunking Dopamine Fasting – Psychology Today https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/sacramento-street-psychiatry/202002/debunking-dopamine-fasting
    [6] What Addiction Science Got Wrong About Dopamine, with Dr … https://carlerikfisher.substack.com/p/what-addiction-science-got-wrong
    [7] The False Claim That Addiction Is "All About the Dopamine" – Filter https://filtermag.org/addiction-dopamine/amp/
    [8] Meta-Analysis Finds No Support for Dopamine Hypothesis of … https://www.madinamerica.com/2021/10/meta-analysis-finds-no-support-dopamine-hypothesis-schizophrenia/
    [9] From the Dopamine Theory to the Outcomes Paradox – Mad in the UK https://www.madintheuk.com/2024/04/from-the-dopamine-theory-to-the-outcomes-paradox/
    [10] The dopamine hypothesis of bipolar affective disorder – PMC – NIH https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5401767/

  10. Sorry, but the section mentioned, if removed, would make things far worse, because nobody would ever be able to freely say anything online, because no company would be willing to host even remotely offensive content if they are at risk of liability. The law should address the algorithms, not the fundamental section which, the hosts are right to say, "built the internet"

  11. Infinite scroll is everywhere, why just facebook and youtube?

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