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A Jury Found Meta and Google Liable for Addictive Design. Here's What That Looks Like in Code.
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A Jury Found Meta and Google Liable for Addictive Design. Here's What That Looks Like in Code.

via Dev.toGabriel Anhaia

My project: Hermes IDE | GitHub Me: gabrielanhaia A Jury Did What Congress Couldn't Years of Senate hearings. Whistleblower leaks. Outraged op-eds. None of it stuck. Then twelve ordinary people in a courtroom looked at how Instagram and YouTube were built, looked at the harm those designs caused to a young woman, and said: you did this on purpose. Meta and Google are now legally liable for the addictive design of their platforms. Not for hosting bad content. For how they engineered the experience itself. That distinction matters. A lot. Because every developer reading this has shipped some version of these exact patterns. What Was Actually on Trial The plaintiffs didn't argue that social media is bad. The argument was surgical: Meta and Google knowingly designed features to maximize engagement even after internal research showed those features caused psychological harm to younger users. Internal documents proved both companies knew. Engineers and researchers inside these organizations

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