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Platform Design Litigation Yields Historic Verdicts Against Meta and Google
Tech Policy Press
· 2026-04-06
Commentary
This post covers what appear to be landmark jury verdicts against Meta and Google in platform design defect litigation — cases that sit at the intersection of Section 230 immunity, First Amendment editorial discretion, and product liability theories targeting algorithmic recommendation systems. The outcomes are directly relevant to the newsletter's tracking of whether platform design choices (recommendation engines, engagement-optimizing algorithms) can give rise to civil liability that §230 does not foreclose, following the framework established in cases like Anderson v. TikTok and Garcia v. Character Technologies. Historic verdicts against named strong-positive-signal defendants on design liability theories would represent a major doctrinal development across all three pillars of the newsletter's coverage.
Key point: Jury verdicts imposing civil liability on Meta and Google for platform design would mark a watershed moment in the ongoing litigation over whether §230 immunity extends to design defect claims targeting algorithmic architecture, potentially reshaping the liability landscape for all major technology platforms.
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