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‘The floodgates are open’: Harry and Meghan welcome result of landmark social media trial

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have said “the floodgates are open” for more legal cases against tech giants after Google and Meta were found liable for a woman’s social media addiction in a landmark lawsuit.

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  • March 19, 2026
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The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have said “the floodgates are open” for more legal cases against tech giants after Google and Meta were found liable for a woman’s social media addiction in a landmark lawsuit.

A jury in Los Angels found Instagram, which is owned by Meta, and YouTube, which is owned by Google, were responsible for harm caused to the 20-year-old – awarding her $6m in damages.

Meta and Google both said they disagree with the verdict and plan to appeal.

But it’s been seen as a bellwether decision that will inform hundreds more cases against social media companies for creating addictive algorithms.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex said “accountability has finally arrived” and declared: “The question is no longer whether social media must change – it’s when, and how fast.”

Prince Harry and Meghan, Duke and Duchess of Sussex. File pic: Reuters Image: Prince Harry and Meghan, Duke and Duchess of Sussex. File pic: Reuters

‘The floodgates are now open’

In a statement, Harry and Meghan hailed the “landmark” court verdict as a victory “for families, advocates, and young people everywhere – and a powerful message that justice has caught up to Big Tech”.

They said the case had “pulled back the curtain” and “confirmed what parents and experts have said all along: the harm isn’t in parenting, it’s in product design”.

They said that the outcome had “changed the conversation about tech accountability forever”, adding: “The floodgates are now open. There will be more cases, more demands for reform, and more insistence on responsibility.

How the case unfolded

After more than 40 hours of deliberation across nine days, California jurors decided Meta and YouTube were negligent in the design or operation of their platforms.

The jury also decided each company’s negligence was a substantial factor in causing harm to the woman, who has remained anonymous.

The trial, which lasted around a month and ended on Wednesday when the verdict was delivered, centred around arguments that Instagram and YouTube (and TikTok and Snapchat, but they settled out of court) were built to be addictive and were therefore harmful.

It focused on the case of KGM, or Kaley, as she was called in court, a now 20-year-old Californian who says she developed a number of mental health issues after using social media from a young age.

“How do you make a child never put down the phone? That’s called the engineering of addiction,” her lawyer, Mark Lanier, told the jury.

“They engineered it, they put these features on the phones. These are Trojan horses: They look wonderful and great…but you invite them in and they take over.”

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