Social media firms face legal reckoning over mental health harms to kids

Social media firms face legal reckoning over mental health harms to kids



For years, social media companies have disputed allegations that they harm children’s mental health through deliberate design choices that addict kids to their platforms and fail to protect them from sexual predators and dangerous content.


Now, these tech giants are getting a chance to make their case in courtrooms around the country, including before a jury for the first time.


Some of the biggest players from Meta to TikTok are facing federal and state trials that seek to hold them responsible for harming children’s mental health. The lawsuits have come from school districts, local, state and the federal government as well as thousands of families.

 


Two trials are now underway in Los Angeles and in New Mexico, with more to come. The courtroom showdowns are the culmination of years of scrutiny of the platforms over child safety, and whether deliberate design choices make them addictive and serve up content that leads to depression, eating disorders or suicide.


Experts see the reckoning as reminiscent of cases against tobacco and opioid markets, and the plaintiffs hope that social media platforms will see similar outcomes as cigarette makers and drug companies, pharmacies and distributors.


The outcomes could challenge the companies’ First Amendment shield and Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act, which protects tech companies from liability for material posted on their platforms. They could also be costly in the form of legal fees and settlements. And they could force the companies to change how they operate, potentially losing users and advertising dollars.


Here’s a look at the major social media harms cases in the United States.


The Los Angeles case centres on addiction 
Jurors in a landmark social media case that seeks to hold tech companies responsible for harms to children got their first glimpse into what will be a lengthy trial characterised by duelling narratives from the plaintiffs and the two remaining defendants, Meta and YouTube.


At the core of the Los Angeles case is a 20-year-old identified only by the initials “KGM,” whose case could determine how thousands of similar lawsuits will play out. KGM and the cases of two other plaintiffs have been selected to be bellwether trials – essentially test cases for both sides to see how their arguments play out before a jury.


“This is a monumental inflection point in social media,” said Matthew Bergman of the Seattle-based Social Media Victims Law Centre, which represents more than 1,000 plaintiffs in lawsuits against social media companies. “When we started doing this four years ago no one said we’d ever get to trial. And here we are trying our case in front of a fair and impartial jury.” 
On Wednesday Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified, mostly sticking to past talking points, including a lengthy back-and-forth about age verification where he said, “I don’t see why this is so complicated,” reiterating that the company’s policy restricts users under the age of 13 and that it works to detect users who have lied about their ages to bypass restrictions..


At one point, the plaintiff’s attorney, Mark Lanier, asked Zuckerberg if people tend to use something more if it’s addictive.


“I’m not sure what to say to that,” Zuckerberg said. “I don’t think that applies here.” 
New Mexico goes after Meta over sexual exploitation 
A team led by New Mexico Attorney General Raul Torrez, who sued Meta in 2023, built their case by posing as children on social media, then documenting sexual solicitations they received as well as Meta’s response.


Torrez wants Meta to implement more effective age verification and do more to remove bad actors from its platform.


He also is seeking changes to algorithms that can serve up harmful material, and has criticised the end-to-end encryption that can prevent the monitoring of communications with children for safety.


Meta has noted that encrypted messaging is encouraged in general as a privacy and security measure by some state and federal authorities.


The trial kicked off in early February. In his opening statement, prosecuting attorney Donald Migliori said Meta has misrepresented the safety of its platforms, choosing to engineer its algorithms to keep young people online while knowing that children are at risk of sexual exploitation.


“Meta clearly knew that youth safety was not its corporate priority… that youth safety was less important than growth and engagement,” Migliori told the jury.


Meta attorney Kevin Huff pushed back on those assertions in his opening statement, highlighting an array of efforts by the company to weed out harmful content from its platforms while warning users that some dangerous content still gets past its safety net.


School districts head to trial 
A trial scheduled for this summer pits school districts against social media companies before US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in Oakland, California. Called a multidistrict litigation, it names six public school districts from around the country as the bellwethers.


Jayne Conroy, a lawyer on plaintiffs’ trial team, was also an attorney for plaintiffs seeking to hold pharmaceutical companies responsible for the opioid epidemic. She said the cornerstone of both cases is the same: addiction.


“With the social media case, we’re focused primarily on children and their developing brains and how addiction is such a threat to their wellbeing and… the harms that are caused to children – how much they’re watching and what kind of targeting is being done,” she said.


The medical science, she added, “is not really all that different, surprisingly, from an opioid or a heroin addiction. We are all talking about the dopamine reaction.” 
Both the social media and the opioid cases claim negligence on the part of the defendants.


“What we were able to prove in the opioid cases is the manufacturers, the distributors, the pharmacies, they knew about the risks, they downplayed them, they oversupplied, and people died,” Conroy said. “Here, it is very much the same thing. These companies knew about the risks, they have disregarded the risks, they doubled down to get profits from advertisers over the safety of kids. And kids were harmed and kids died.” 
Resolution could take years amid duelling narratives 
Social media companies have disputed that their products are addictive. During questioning Wednesday by the plaintiff’s lawyer during the Los Angeles trial, Zuckerberg said he still agrees with a previous statement he made that the existing body of scientific work has not proven that social media causes mental health harms.


Some researchers do indeed question whether addiction is the appropriate term to describe heavy use of social media. Social media addiction is not recognised as an official disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the authority within the psychiatric community.


But the companies face increasing pushback on the issue of social media’s effects on children’s mental health, not only among academics but also parents, schools and lawmakers.


“While Meta has doubled down in this area to address mounting concerns by rolling out safety features, several recent reports suggest that the company continues to aggressively prioritise teens as a user base and doesn’t always adhere to its own rules,” said Emarketer analyst Minda Smiley.


With appeals and any settlement discussions, the cases against social media companies could take years to resolve. And unlike in Europe and Australia, tech regulation in the US is moving at a glacial pace.


“Parents, education, and other stakeholders are increasingly hoping lawmakers will do more,” Smiley said. “While there is momentum at the state and federal level, Big Tech lobbying, enforcement challenges, and lawmaker disagreements over how to best regular social media have slowed meaningful progress.



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Brazilian Prez hails AI Summit, says digital world returned to its homeland

Brazilian Prez hails AI Summit, says digital world returned to its homeland



Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Thursday said his country advocates governance which ensures that artificial intelligence (AI) strengthens democracy, social cohesion and sovereignty of nations.


In his address at the Leaders’ Plenary Session at the AI Impact Summit here, he also asserted that putting human beings at the “centre of our decisions is an urgent task”.


Earlier, Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the summit and unveiled the ‘MANAV’ vision for a human-centric approach and use of AI with a strong accent on sovereignty and inclusivity.


The inaugural ceremony saw the presence of several heads of state, including President Lula, French President Emmanuel Macron, many global AI leaders, academicians and researchers, heads of many tech giants and philanthropists, among others.

 


At the Leaders’ Plenary Session, the Brazilian president delivered an address in Portuguese.


He also posted excerpts from his speech in a series of posts in Portuguese on X along with photos of his meeting with many political and tech leaders.


“For Brazil, it is a pleasure to participate in the Artificial Intelligence Impact Summit organised by the Indian government, this being the first time it has been held in the Global South,” Lula said.


Here in Delhi, the digital world “returns to its homeland”. It was Indian mathematicians who bequeathed to the world, thousands of years ago, the binary system that would come to structure modern computing, he said.


“We are making our way back to discuss one of the greatest dilemmas of our time,” the Brazilian leader underlined.


In his address, Lula underscored that putting the human being at the “centre of our decisions is an urgent task”.


The Brazilian National Congress is discussing a policy and a regulatory framework for AI, he said, adding Brazil has launched the Brazilian Artificial Intelligence Plan.


This plan expresses “our commitment to improving people’s quality of life through more agile public services and greater stimulus to job and income generation”, he said.


The Brazilian Artificial Intelligence Plan (2024-2028) is a strategic initiative designed to develop Brazil’s AI capabilities.


Lula further said this was the paradigm of the declaration on AI that was approved at the BRICS Summit in Rio de Janeiro last year. This is the stance that Brazil adopts in dialogue with other partners and forums, he said.


He said “we are in dialogue” with the Global Partnership on Artificial Intelligence, which originated within the G7.


But none of these forums replaces the universality of the United Nations for international governance of artificial intelligence, which is “multilateral, inclusive, and development-oriented”, he said.


The UN General Assembly has established the Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence, following intergovernmental negotiations and broad consultations with diverse stakeholders.


The Independent International Scientific Panel on Artificial Intelligence is the first global scientific body on the subject and brings together experts, facts and evidence in its pronouncements, Lula said.


The president said Brazil advocates governance that “recognises the diversity of national trajectories and ensures that artificial intelligence strengthens democracy, social cohesion, and the sovereignty of nations”.


Lula said throughout its history, India has bequeathed to humanity fruitful and extraordinary contributions in diverse fields of knowledge — arts, science, and philosophy.


“This legacy brings to light profound ethical dilemmas concerning justice, diversity, inclusion, and resilience. This heritage is a powerful reference point in the search for answers to the challenges that artificial intelligence poses to contemporary societies,” he said.


The Ministry of External Affairs had earlier announced that President Lula will be paying a state visit to India from February 18-22.


Prime Minister Modi and President Lula are scheduled to have a bilateral meeting on February 21. 



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AI is the biggest opportunity for tech sector, IT industry: Chandrasekaran

AI is the biggest opportunity for tech sector, IT industry: Chandrasekaran


Highlighting that AI is the next big infrastructure — an infrastructure of intelligence — N Chandrasekaran, chairman, Tata Sons, said it will have a very profound impact, exactly the same way earlier infrastructure changes did — steam engines, electricity or the internet.

 


Underscoring the transformative impact of artificial intelligence (AI), Chandrasekaran said the group is adopting AI across the stack — from silicon to systems to AI-ready data centres to applications and AI agents.

 


Announcing major plans for the company, Chandrasekaran said the Tata Group will establish the country’s first large-scale AI-optimised data centre, purpose-built for next-generation AI training and inference. “I’m very happy to announce that we have partnered with OpenAI to build the first 100-megawatt capacity, which will scale to 1 gigawatt.”

 
 


Mentioning the need for global and local partnerships, he added that the company has also announced a collaboration with AMD to create high-density AI capacity in India.

 


As for other initiatives, he said, “We are already building an AI data insights platform. What we are building is totally based on diverse Indian data sets on top of the foundational models. So, intelligence becomes available across the diversity of Indian contexts.”

 


Chandrasekaran mentioned TCS and Tata Communications together are also building an AI operating system for industries.

 


“What we will do is build agentic industry solutions for every industry. We are already well on that journey and we will work with partners to launch it and take it to all enterprises around the globe.”

 


In addition, the firm also has plans to build domain-centric, AI-optimised chips for every industry. “We will first launch or work towards getting it ready for the automotive sector,” he added.

 


For the IT sector, he said this is the biggest opportunity for the industry. “Because the IT industry’s real value is the context: an understanding of every enterprise’s business and technology landscape and making the right technology work inside the processes and the ecosystem — the supplier, customer and all the other connections an enterprise has,” he added.

 


He concluded by saying, “I just want to say that we are standing here at a very defining moment. It is the age of abundant intelligence, where the scarce resources are trust, stewardship and human capability.”



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India unveils 'New Delhi Frontier AI Commitments' at AI Summit: Details

India unveils 'New Delhi Frontier AI Commitments' at AI Summit: Details


Union IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw on Thursday announced a key outcome of the India AI Impact Summit, unveiling the ‘New Delhi Frontier AI Commitments’ — a voluntary framework adopted by leading global and Indian artificial intelligence firms.

 


Calling it a “significant outcome” of the summit, the minister said, “Today, leading frontier AI companies along with our own AI companies have come together to make a set of voluntary commitments – a shared commitment for inclusive and shared AI.”

 


He said the initiative reflects a common vision among global AI leaders and Indian innovators to ensure that AI development remains responsible, inclusive and beneficial for society.

 
 


Two frontier AI commitments

 


Vaishnaw outlined two central commitments under the initiative. “The first is advancing real-world AI usage through anonymised and aggregated insights,” Vaishnaw said, adding that this would “support evidence-based policymaking on jobs, skills and policy making”.

 


According to him, the effort is expected to help governments and institutions better track employment trends and evolving skill requirements while maintaining privacy safeguards.

 


“The second is strengthening multilingual and use-case evaluations,” he said, stressing the importance of ensuring AI systems work effectively across languages and social contexts.

 

“This is especially important for the Global South, to ensure that AI works effectively across languages and cultures,” he added.   

 


Focus on inclusive, responsible AI

 


Announcing the commitments, Vaishnaw said leading frontier AI companies, along with India’s own innovators such as Sarvam, Bharatjan, Yani, and Soket, “have come together to make a set of voluntary commitments that reflect a shared vision for inclusive and responsible AI”.

 


He added that the initiative positions India as a leading voice in shaping AI governance from a Global South perspective. “This initiative positions India at the forefront of building a Global South-led perspective on AI governance, one that balances innovation with equity and real-world impact,” the minister said.



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Reliance to invest ₹10 trillion in AI over next 7 years: Mukesh Ambani

Reliance to invest ₹10 trillion in AI over next 7 years: Mukesh Ambani


Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani| Image: Bloomberg


Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani on Thursday announced an investment of ₹10 trillion over the next seven years to build artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure and services in India.

 


“Jio will now connect India with the intelligence era. We will deliver intelligence to every citizen, every sector of the economy and every facet of social development and every service of government,” Ambani said during the keynote address at AI Impact Summit in New Delhi.

 


He said the investment, to be made by Jio together with Reliance, will begin this year. “This is not a speculative investment… This is patient discipline, nation building and strategic resilience for decades to come,” he said.

 
 


Ambani further added that India cannot afford to “rent intelligence”, adding that Jio will reduce the cost of intelligence as dramatically as it did the cost of data.

 


Outlining Jio’s plans, he said the company will build India’s sovereign compute infrastructure through gigawatt scale data centre. “Construction has already begun on a multi-gigawatt AI infrastructure in Jamnagar. Over 120 megawatts will come online in the second half of 2026, with a clear path to gigawatt-scale capacity for training,” he said. 

 

First Published: Feb 19 2026 | 12:27 PM IST



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India unveils 3 sovereign AI models at Delhi Summit: Key features, details

India unveils 3 sovereign AI models at Delhi Summit: Key features, details



India unveiled three major sovereign artificial intelligence (AI) models at the India AI Impact Summit 2026 in New Delhi on Wednesday, marking a strong push for homegrown AI systems.

 


The launches signal India’s shift from using global AI tools to creating its own infrastructure powered by local data, languages and computing.

 


Below is a closer look at what each model offers and their key specifications

 


Sarvam AI launches two large language models

 


Homegrown startup Sarvam AI introduced two indigenous large language models (LLMs) trained specifically for Indian languages — a 30-billion-parameter model and a larger 105-billion-parameter model.

 
 


The smaller model is designed for real-time conversations with a 32,000-token context window, which helps keep inference costs low. The larger model supports up to 128,000 tokens, allowing it to handle more complex reasoning and long-form tasks.

 


According to the company, the models performed competitively against global systems such as Gemma-27B, Mistral-32-24B and Qwen-30B, measuring mathematical reasoning, coding accuracy and problem-solving.

 


Sarvam Co-founder Pratyush Kumar said the company’s 105-billion-parameter model performs well on most benchmarks. He explained that although it is only about one-sixth the size of the 600-billion-parameter DeepSeek R1 model released last year, it was trained from scratch and delivers similar competitive intelligence.

 


He added that the model is also cheaper than Google’s Gemini Flash while outperforming it on several benchmarks.

 


At the event, Sarvam also showcased its chatbot Vikram, which demonstrated conversations in multiple Indian languages. The name honours Indian physicist Vikram Sarabhai.

 

The models support all 22 scheduled Indian languages and are optimised for voice-first interactions. The 30B model is pre-trained on 16 trillion tokens and is aimed at long conversations and agentic workflows, while the larger model uses a mixture-of-experts architecture to reduce costs. 
 

 


Gnani.ai unveils voice cloning AI system

 


Bengaluru-based startup Gnani.ai launched Vachana TTS, a text-to-speech system capable of cloning voices and generating speech in 12 Indian languages.

 


The system can recreate a person’s voice using less than 10 seconds of recorded audio while preserving tone, pitch and speaking style. It also allows the same voice to speak across multiple languages without losing identity.

 

The company said the model achieves a Mean Opinion Score of 4.23 and a character error rate below 0.6 per cent. Built for low-bandwidth environments, the model is targeted at government services, customer support systems and large-scale enterprise deployments, with all data hosted within India. 
 

 


BharatGen launches 17B multilingual foundation model

 


India’s sovereign AI initiative BharatGen announced the launch of Param2, a 17-billion-parameter multilingual mixture-of-experts foundational model.

 


The system is designed to support multiple Indic languages and reflects India’s linguistic and cultural diversity. It is intended for use in governance, education, healthcare, agriculture and enterprise applications.

 


The model was built in collaboration with Nvidia using its AI software stack and infrastructure to ensure scalability and performance.

 


India AI Summit: Why these launches matter

 


The unveiling of these models signals a major shift in India’s AI strategy. The focus is shifting toward AI sovereignty, with an emphasis on local control over data computing power, and core AI capabilities.

 


The launches signal a strong push for an India-first design approach, with models being trained for Indian languages and real-world local conditions. Efforts are also being made to ensure mass accessibility, as voice-first AI could help expand usage among non-English speakers.



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