Meta and Google lost a major social media addiction lawsuit. Their troubles are far from over.

This week’s verdict in the landmark social media addiction trial against Meta (META) and Google (GOOG, GOOGL) could have major implications for how the companies, and their rivals, operate their businesses.

But the road between the Los Angeles jury finding Meta and Google negligent and the companies being forced to overhaul their respective platforms is a long one that may never materialize.

Jurors in the trial said Meta and YouTube knew the designs of their platforms were dangerous, that users wouldn't realize the danger, and that the companies failed to warn of the danger when a reasonable platform would have.

They also awarded the plaintiffs, a now-20-year-old woman known in legal filings as K.G.M. and her mother, Karen, $6 million in compensatory and punitive damages. Both Google parent Alphabet and Meta say they plan to appeal.

The suit is seen as a potential watershed moment as parents, school districts, and states line up thousands of similar lawsuits against the two companies. But experts say the appeals process will take months and raise questions related to free speech protections that could send the case all the way to the Supreme Court.

A win for the plaintiffs there could be disastrous for Meta and Alphabet, while raising serious questions about free speech on the web. But if the companies prevail, it could close the door on the way the plaintiffs’ attorneys approached their lawsuit.

The path ahead and free speech concerns

The social media addiction lawsuit is important because it’s seen as a bellwether for future cases against Meta, Google, and counterparts like TikTok and Snap (SNAP).

The case, known as JCCP 5255, alleged that K.G.M.’s social media use, which began when she was 10, led to “dangerous dependency on [the social media companies’ products], anxiety, depression, self-harm, and body dysmorphia.”

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 25: Plaintiffs' attorney Mark Lanier arrives in the morning to the Los Angeles Superior Court during one of the coordinated lawsuits alleging that Meta and YouTube are designed to hook young users and cause them a variety of negative mental health effects, including strangling themselves and developing eating disorders, on Wednesday, March 25, 2026 in Los Angeles, CA. The jury found Meta and Youtube negligent, finding Meta 70% responsible for harm and YouTube 30% responsible awarding the plaintiff $3 million in damages. (Kayla Bartkowski / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Plaintiffs' attorney Mark Lanier arrives in the morning to the Los Angeles Superior Court on Wednesday, March 25, 2026 in Los Angeles, CA. (Kayla Bartkowski / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) · Kayla Bartkowski via Getty Images

Critics have traditionally argued against the content social platforms host, saying that it is dangerous and damaging to younger users. But Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act shields internet companies from being held liable for hosting user content and for making “good faith” efforts to moderate content they find “objectionable.”

The law has drawn the ire of both Republicans and Democrats in the past, with Republicans arguing that it allows companies to censor right-wing voices and Democrats saying it aids the spread of disinformation.

Courts have largely sided with social media and internet companies on Section 230 in the past. But the plaintiffs’ attorneys in the Los Angeles trial framed their arguments around the design of the social platforms, including features like infinite scroll, “likes,” and notifications, resulting in Wednesday’s verdict.