Will Landmark Meta Ruling Lead to a SOCIAL MEDIA BAN?
Politics Uncensored
Friday, 27 March 2026 - 49 minutes
On today’s show, Meta and Google found negligent in social media addiction trial joining us to discuss this landmark ruling is Tech Reported for Politico Aaron Mak.But first it's the week unwrapped:Failed Reform candidate Matt Goodwin’s new book is reportedly filled with falsehoods and hallucinations after allegations that he extensively used ChatGPT to write it. Prompting him to have the nickname, MattGpt.The Reform UK candidate who lost a crunch by-election last month has defended using AI to help write his latest book.Matt Goodwin came in second place, behind the Green Party’s Hannah Spencer, in the Gorton and Denton vote – a sign that Nigel Farage’s party may be losing momentum with voters.Now the ex-university academic, who came under fire during the campaign for calling for women and young girls to be given a “biological reality” check, has had to defend his use of ChatGPT on his latest book, Suicide of a Nation: Immigration, Islam, Identity.The book has been described as a “story of how Britain, one of the most remarkable countries on earth, is not just in decline but is committing national suicide”.--Morgan Mcsweeney has claimed that his phone, containing all his messages for friend of a nonce Peter Mandelson has been stolen. The convenience of which has led to some doubting this claim. Keir Starmer today said it was “far-fetched” to claim that Mcsweeney is lying. --And finally Nigel Farage has hinted that one of his former MPs in Essex, who quit Reform UK after allegations of financial misconduct, could rejoin his party.Nigel Farage has hinted that one of his former MPs in Essex, who quit Reform UK after allegations of financial misconduct, could rejoin his party.James McMurdock gave up his party whip last year over questions about his eligibility for Covid-19 support loans that he received through two companies. He denied any wrongdoing.Asked during a local election campaign visit to Corringham in Essex, Farage said "I'm hoping we can get this thing ironed out".McMurdock sits as an independent for South Basildon and East Thurrock, which includes Corringham, and he confirmed he would like to rejoin the party.--After this, Technology Reporter for Politico, based in the US, Aaron Mak joins the show to explain several landmark social media rulings.Meta has just lost a court case that could have huge implications for children in the future. The company behind Whatsapp, Instagram and Facebook has just been fined $375 million dollars for damaging children’s mental health and exposing them to sexual content.But that is not the only court case which Meta has lost this week. Yesterday a woman successfully won her case over her childhood addiction to social media.In a small court in Los Angeles, both Meta and Youtube were found liable. Now they are facing a wave of 40 more similar lawsuits.Los Angeles CaseThe woman, known as Kaley, was awarded $6m in damages (NYT) She also received an additional $3m punitive damages (NYT) Jurors determined Meta and Google "acted with malice, oppression, or fraud" (NYT)Kaley said she started using Instagram aged nine and YouTube aged six, and encountered no attempts to block her because of her age (NYT)Meta and Google said they disagreed with the verdict and intended to appeal (BBC)Meta said: "Teen mental health is profoundly complex and cannot be linked to a single app.”Meta faces a wave of more than 40 similar lawsuits Child Social Media CaseA court in New Mexico ruled that the company behind WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook was liable for how its platform exposed children to sexually explicit content and predators.Meta says it will appeal the decision and that it works hard to keep people safe on its platforms.Experts say the ruling could now have big consequences around the world (NYT)There are currently more than 2,000 active cases looking at social media harm in the US (BBC)Guest Bio:Aaron Mak is a technology reporter at POLITICO. As an undergraduate, he interned at POLITICO Magazine and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Aaron later worked as a technology reporter at Slate, where he won a Writers Guild of America award for a feature delving into Asian men’s rights groups on social media. Aaron holds a bachelor’s degree from Yale College and a JD from Yale Law School. In his free time, he likes watching cult classics and listening to cloud rap.Hosts: Zoe Grunewald and Ali MilaniGuest: Aaron MakProducers: Hugh Smiley and Ruth Rashleigh
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