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Home  /  World  /  The US  /  New York City Sues Facebook, TikTok, Snapchat Over Youth Mental Health Crisis

New York City Sues Facebook, TikTok, Snapchat Over Youth Mental Health Crisis

by Siddhi Vinayak Misra
October 9, 2025
in The US, World
Reading Time: 5 mins read
New York City Sues Facebook, TikTok, Snapchat Over Youth Mental Health Crisis

Why New York City is taking social media giants to court

New York City has filed a sweeping 327-page federal lawsuit against some of the world’s biggest tech companies, including Meta Platforms (Facebook, Instagram), Alphabet (Google, YouTube), Snap (Snapchat), and ByteDance (TikTok), accusing them of fueling a mental health crisis among children and teens.

The complaint, filed in Manhattan federal court, argues that these platforms have been deliberately designed to be addictive, exploiting young users’ psychology and neurobiology to maximize engagement and profit. The city claims this has led to widespread anxiety, depression, and compulsive social media use among its youth.

With a population of 8.48 million, including 1.8 million minors, New York City is one of the largest plaintiffs yet in a growing wave of lawsuits against social media companies.

What the lawsuit alleges

The city’s lawsuit accuses the companies of:

  • Gross negligence in designing and promoting addictive products.
  • Creating a public nuisance by worsening youth mental health outcomes.
  • Costing taxpayers millions in mental health and school-based intervention programs.

According to the complaint, the platforms “exploit the psychology and neurophysiology of youth,” using algorithms and design features like infinite scroll, push notifications, and personalized feeds to drive compulsive use.

“Defendants should be held to account for the harms their conduct has inflicted,” the filing states. “As it stands now, the plaintiffs are left to abate the nuisance and foot the bill.”

The numbers behind New York’s mental health warning

New York City’s lawsuit draws on alarming statistics:

  • 77.3% of city high school students spend three or more hours per day on screens.
  • Among girls, that figure jumps to 82.1%.
  • The city reports rising rates of lost sleep, depression, and chronic school absences tied to excessive device use.

In January 2024, New York City Health Commissioner Dr. Ashwin Vasan formally declared social media a public health hazard, placing it alongside tobacco and air pollution as a threat to public well-being.

City officials say schools and health agencies have had to divert public funds to manage the fallout, from therapy programs to crisis interventions.

Social media and ‘subway surfing’ deaths

The complaint also links social media to dangerous viral trends, including “subway surfing”, the act of riding atop or alongside moving subway cars, often filmed for likes and views.

Since 2023, at least 16 people have died attempting subway surfing in New York City, including two girls aged 12 and 13 earlier this month. Officials allege that platforms like TikTok and Snapchat amplify and glamorize such stunts through algorithmic promotion.

Big Tech’s response

While most defendants have yet to respond formally, Google spokesperson Jose Castaneda dismissed the claims, saying that YouTube “is not a social network” in the same way as other platforms.

“Allegations concerning YouTube are simply not true,” Castaneda said, arguing that the service functions primarily as a streaming platform, not a space for peer interaction.

Other companies, including Meta, Snap, and ByteDance, declined or did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

A shift from state to federal litigation

This new lawsuit marks a strategic shift by New York City. The Adams administration had previously joined similar state-level cases in California courts but has now withdrawn from that litigation to align with a nationwide federal case based in Oakland, California.

More than 2,000 lawsuits have been filed by cities, school districts, and individuals across the United States, all accusing social media companies of endangering youth mental health. The New York case adds significant weight to the growing legal movement.

What’s at stake for social media companies

If successful, New York City’s lawsuit could set a major precedent for holding tech companies financially liable for the social and psychological effects of their platforms.

Potential outcomes include:

  • Monetary damages to compensate for mental health expenditures.
  • Reform orders requiring changes to algorithms and notification systems.
  • Stronger youth protections, such as default screen-time limits and opt-in data collection.

This case could also accelerate federal policy reform, echoing calls from lawmakers for a “Digital Safety Standard for Youth”, similar to seatbelt laws in cars.

Why this lawsuit matters

The case underscores a growing consensus among parents, educators, and health professionals that social media’s design — not just its content — poses real risks to adolescents.

By reframing social media addiction as a public health crisis, New York City is challenging Silicon Valley’s long-standing claim that platforms merely “connect people.”

If the city succeeds, it could redefine how technology companies are regulated, potentially changing the digital landscape for millions of young Americans.

TL;DR

New York City has sued Meta, Google, Snap, and ByteDance, accusing them of intentionally designing addictive platforms that harm children’s mental health. The lawsuit seeks damages and accountability for rising depression, lost sleep, and dangerous online trends among teens.

Tags: FacebookNew York City
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