Social Media Goes to Court
18 snips
Mar 16, 2026 Jonathan Haidt, NYU social psychologist and author of The Anxious Generation, explains why social media may be addictive for young people. He discusses legal fights in California, an Australian age-verification law, persuasive-design tactics that chase attention, and school and policy responses aimed at reducing harm.
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Design Tricks Make Social Media Addictive
- Social media platforms use design features that maximize engagement and can addict young users.
- Haidt cites persuasive-design courses and slot-machine-like intermittent rewards copied into apps to explain the mechanism of addiction.
Legal Immunity Keeps Families From Suing
- Section 230 shielded platforms from liability, preventing parents from holding companies accountable for harms to children.
- Haidt describes multi-district litigation in California using bellwether trials to test company liability despite Section 230 defenses.
Quick Dopamine Erodes Attention Development
- Early, repeated exposure to quick dopamine from screens undermines development of sustained attention and executive function.
- Haidt contrasts 'slow dopamine' from projects like treehouses with eight-second stimuli that train kids to abandon tasks for new content.




