New Mexico seeks child safety restrictions from Meta platforms in youth harm trial
The changes include mandatory age verification, ending features like 'autoplay' and 'infinite scrolling' for minors
Meta platforms are again under scrutiny for child safety concerns. It comes as a trial is slated to begin in New Mexico on Monday that will test the state’s claims that Meta’s Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp platforms harmed young users’ mental health and its bid for a court order forcing the company to make changes.
The case stems from a lawsuit filed by New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez, a Democrat, accusing the social media giant of designing its platforms to addict young users and failing to protect children from sexual exploitation on its platforms.
During this phase, the judge will decide whether Meta’s Facebook and Instagram platforms have created a “public nuisance” under New Mexico law—a finding that would allow him to order wide‑ranging remedies aimed at curbing alleged harms to young users.
According to court filings,Torrez’s office is expected to seek both billions of dollars more in damages and an order requiring Meta to make substantial changes to its platforms for New Mexico users, including adding age verification; redesigning its according to court filings.algorithm to promote quality content for minors; and ending autoplay and infinite scroll for minors.
Meta has said it has taken extensive measures to ensure its young users are safe.
New Mexico's case is among thousands of lawsuits accusing Meta and other social media companies of intentionally designing products to be addictive to young people, leading to a nationwide mental health crisis.
Meta warned investors last week that legal and regulatory blowback in the European Union and the U.S. "could significantly impact our business and financial results" after years of mounting criticism about children's safety on social media.
Torrez told reporters in a press conference ahead of the trial that his hope is that the case will “set a new standard, not only in the state of New Mexico but nationally and potentially globally, for a new set of expectations for how social media companies are expected to conduct themselves.”
“The New Mexico Attorney General’s focus on a single platform is a misguided strategy that ignores the hundreds of other apps teens use daily,” a Meta spokesperson said in a statement ahead of the trial.
The company said in court filings before the trial that there is no scientific evidence to support the idea that social media has caused mental health problems and that many of the changes Torrez is seeking will be impossible to implement and could force the company to leave the state altogether.
The trial marks the second phase of New Mexico's lawsuit after a jury in March found Meta violated the state’s consumer protection law by misrepresenting the safety of Facebook and Instagram for young users and ordered the company to pay $375 million in damages.
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