
A new class action lawsuit filed by U.S. school districts has resurfaced long-standing concerns about the impact of social media on youth mental health — and whether tech companies have been fully transparent about the risks.
The lawsuit, filed by law firm Motley Rice, accuses Meta and other platforms (including Google, TikTok, and Snapchat) of intentionally concealing internal findings showing that their products may negatively affect users’ psychological well-being.
At the center of the allegation is a Meta research initiative known as Project Mercury.
📁 What Was Project Mercury?
Project Mercury was an internal Meta study conducted with Nielsen to examine how users felt after “deactivating” Facebook and Instagram for one week.
According to internal documents referenced in the lawsuit:
- Users who paused Facebook for a week reported lower levels of depression, anxiety, loneliness, and social comparison.
These results were communicated privately among Meta staff, according to Reuters.
But instead of publishing them, Meta halted the project, arguing that the study had been influenced by negative media narratives.
🧪 Internal Reactions: “This is like the tobacco industry…”
The lawsuit claims that, internally, several Meta researchers:
- Validated the study’s findings, confirming that Facebook and Instagram can have a causal impact on negative social comparison.
- Expressed concern that hiding the results would mirror the behavior of industries that suppressed evidence of harm. One staff member compared it to the tobacco industry “doing research, knowing cigarettes were bad, and then keeping that information to themselves.”
Another staffer reportedly reassured Nick Clegg, then Meta’s head of global public policy, that the findings were legitimate — despite the company’s public position.
🏛️ Meta’s Statements to Congress
The filing also alleges that Meta told Congress it could not quantify whether its products harm teenage girls, even though internal research allegedly showed a causal link to negative mental health impacts.
This discrepancy is a major focus of the legal complaint.
📣 Meta’s Response
Meta spokesperson Andy Stone denied the allegations, arguing that:
- The methodology used in Project Mercury was flawed.
- Meta has spent more than a decade listening to parents, researching youth well-being, and improving product safety.
- The lawsuit relies on “cherry-picked quotes and misinformed opinions.”
A hearing is scheduled for January 26.
⚠️ Additional Allegations Against Social Media Platforms
The lawsuit also accuses Meta and other companies of:
- Encouraging children under 13 to use their platforms
- Failing to adequately address child sexual abuse material
- Promoting the use of their apps among teens in school environments
- Attempting to pay child-focused organizations to publicly defend their product safety
These broader allegations reflect growing concerns about youth exposure to social media.
🧭 Final Thoughts
Whether the claims will be upheld in court remains to be seen.
But the lawsuit raises important questions:
- What responsibility do social media giants have to disclose internal research?
- Are these platforms doing enough to protect younger users?
- And how can families, schools, and policymakers navigate the mental-health risks associated with online platforms?
Regardless of the outcome, one thing is clear: transparency in tech is no longer optional — it’s essential.
Recourse: Cyber News
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