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Twenty-year-old testifies at US trial about harm from social media addiction

about 3 hours ago
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For the first time, a jury will hear testimony on Wednesday from a young woman who alleges social media companies intentionally create addictive products, harming children.The witness taking the stand, known by her initials KGM, is the lead plaintiff in an expansive lawsuit against Meta – which owns Instagram and Facebook – and YouTube currently at trial in Los Angeles.KGM, who is now 20, alleges that she became addicted to social media apps before she was 10 and would spend hours every day scrolling through photos and videos.This led to years of mental health issues, according to her lawyers and court documents.KGM is expected to testify about how her constant use of social media led to depression, anxiety and body dysmorphia.

According to court documents, her mother attempted to block her use of the apps to no avail,She “developed a compulsion to engage with those products nonstop”, due to their “addictive design” and “constant notifications”, her lawsuit says,This trial is the first in a consolidated group of cases in Los Angeles superior court brought against the social media companies on behalf of more than 1,600 plaintiffs, including more than 350 families and 250 school districts,KGM’s case is also the first of more than 20 “bellwether” trials, which are used to gauge juries’ reactions and potential verdicts, as well as set legal precedent,TikTok and Snap were originally named as defendants in KGM’s case, but days before the trial began last month, both companies reached settlement agreements with the plaintiffs, the terms of which have not been publicly disclosed.

Meta and YouTube deny wrongdoing in the case.The former said in a statement: “These lawsuits misportray our company and the work we do every day to provide young people with safe, valuable experiences online.” YouTube spokesperson José Castañeda called the allegations in the lawsuits “simply not true” and said that providing young people with a “safer, healthier experience has always been core to our work”.Before KGM’s testimony on Wednesday, youth leaders, online safety advocates and parents held a press conference on the courthouse steps.Lennon Torres, the campaigns and program manager for advocacy group Heat Initiative, emphasized the importance of the first-of-a-kind trial.

“Let me be very clear about one thing: the verdict in this case is not the point.That is not justice.This is justice,” Torres said, according to NBC News.“We have found a microphone and a voice that breaks through their predatory algorithms, and we will be heard.”Along with KGM, jurors will also hear from her mother Karen and sister Keanna, as well as her therapist Victoria Burke.

Over the course of the trial, KGM’s lawyers have called to the witness stand Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of Meta; Adam Mosseri, the head of Instagram, and Cristos Goodrow, the vice-president of engineering at YouTube.Zuckerberg said during his testimony last Wednesday that Meta had improved in identifying underage users, but he added: “I always wish that we could have gotten there sooner.” He said some users lie about their age when joining Instagram and that the company removes those it identifies as underage.The plaintiffs’ lawyers hit back at those claims: “You expect a nine-year-old to read all of the fine print? That’s your basis for swearing under oath that children under 13 are not allowed?”When Mosseri took the stand a week earlier, he pushed back on the science behind social media addiction, denying that users could be “clinically addicted”.He described children’s high usage of Instagram as “problematic use” – similar to “watching TV for longer than you feel good about”.

Psychologists do not classify social media addiction as an official diagnosis, but researchers have documented the harmful consequences of compulsive use among young people, and lawmakers around the world repeatedly voiced concern about social networks’ addictive potential.KGM’s lawyers are expected to wrap their arguments in the coming days and then Meta and YouTube’s lawyers will present their cases.
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Drastic Dave goes vague at Diageo | Nils Pratley

Diageo’s once high-flying share price was already back at 2012 levels. Now the dividend is there too. Sir Dave Lewis has cut it in half, chopping as drastically as the market feared he would.But that doesn’t quite explain Wednesday’s 13% fall in the shares. Rather, that was down to two factors

about 7 hours ago
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John Lewis scraps £500m deal to build 1,000 rental homes

The John Lewis Partnership is pulling out of a £500m deal to build almost 1,000 residential rental homes for rent in Bromley, Reading and West Ealing amid a “cautious property market”.The retailer, which owns Waitrose supermarkets and John Lewis department stores, blamed a “fundamental shift in the economic conditions”, which it said had made it difficult for its financial partner, Aberdeen, to raise funds for the venture, first launched in 2020.Aberdeen said its difficulties with fundraising “reflect the realities of the environment” and a “challenging UK market” between 2022 and 2025.A spokesperson said the investment firm still planned to increase its presence in UK homes through existing partnerships.“We have high conviction in build-to-rent in the UK and globally,” they said

about 8 hours ago
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Diageo slashes dividend and vows to address Guinness shortage in London

Diageo has slashed its dividend and cut its annual sales and profit forecast for the second time in four months, as the maker of Guinness warned of capacity constraints affecting drinkers of “the black stuff” in London pubs.The world’s largest spirits maker – which owns brands including Smirnoff vodka, Johnnie Walker whisky and Don Julio tequila – lost more than £5bn of its market value on Wednesday as it reported weak demand in the US and China in the first results released under the new chief executive, Sir Dave Lewis.The former Tesco chief executive, who earned the nickname “Drastic Dave” as a result of his cost-cutting during almost three decades at the conglomerate Unilever, took the reins at Diageo in January and wasted no time in cutting the company’s shareholder dividend in his attempt to turn around the drinks maker.Describing his first seven weeks in the role as “pretty intense”, Lewis said in a results webcast it had not been a simple choice to reduce the dividend, halving it to 20 cents a share, down from 40.5 cents a year ago

about 9 hours ago
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HSBC bankers to share $3.9bn bonus pot, the highest in more than a decade

Bankers at HSBC are to share a bonus pot worth $3.9bn (£2.9bn), the highest in more than a decade, after Europe’s largest lender reported better-than-expected annual results.The bonus pool for staff is 10% higher than a year earlier and the bank said it had determined it “based on a review of our performance against financial and non-financial metrics”, while the bank’s chief executive’s pay also rose.Georges Elhedery, who took over as the CEO in 2024, signalled that his sweeping turnaround of the lender was drawing to a close

about 11 hours ago
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Starmer says ‘more to do’ on cost of living despite £117 fall in energy bills from April - as it happened

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.Energy bills in Great Britain will fall by £117 to a typical annual bill of £1,641 from April, the regulator Ofgem announced this morning.It announced a 7% reduction of the energy price cap for the period covering 1 April to 30 June.This change amounts to a reduction of about £10 a month for the average household using both electricity and gas, Ofgem said. This is more than £200 lower than a year ago

about 11 hours ago
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Ineos said to be in talks to sell parts of business to tackle rising debt

The chemicals empire owned by the billionaire Jim Ratcliffe is in talks to sell parts of the business in the hope of raising hundreds of millions of pounds to tackle its rising debts, according to a report.The talks are at an early stage but have focused on selling assets from Ratcliffe’s vinyls business, Ineos Inovyn, the Financial Times said, citing people familiar with the matter.Ineos group is scrambling to cut costs and reduce its debts amid a prolonged downturn in the global chemicals industry. Ratcliffe, who is the UK’s seventh richest person, has described this as “unsurvivable” for chemical plants in Europe owing to “rising carbon costs and weak trade defence”.The two largest companies in his empire, Ineos Group Holdings and Ineos Quattro Holdings, together had more than £18bn of borrowings at the end of last year, an increase of almost £3bn on the year before

about 11 hours ago
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Maxi Shield, beloved Australian drag queen and Drag Race Down Under star, dies aged 51

2 days ago
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Kenneth Williams and racist attitudes | Brief letters

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Philippe Gaulier obituary

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‘Musicians drank too much and slept on my barn floor’: Andrew Bird on making cult album The Mysterious Production of Eggs

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Is the UK’s golden era of free museum entry coming to an end?

4 days ago
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The Guide #231: ​How the ​hunt for the ​next James Bond ​became the ​franchise’s ​best ​marketing ​tool

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