Anyone who has attended a K-12 school017 Archiveshas a child, friend, or loved one who has attended one in the past decade knows one thing for sure — teachers and administrators are not fond of social media. One school is so critical of social media that it is suing the companies themselves.
The Lansing School District, which includes 25 schools in Michigan, filed a complaint against Meta, TikTok, Google, and Snap, Inc. on Sept. 12 for not providing "adequate warnings" to children about how harmful social media can be, according to the Lansing State Journal. The school filed its complaint in the Northern District of California.
Meta, TikTok, Google, and Snap did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Mashable. Ben Shuldiner, the superintendent of the Lansing School District, said in a statement emailed to Mashable that social media is an "incredible tool" that can "be used to learn and to teach." However, he argues, it can "also be used to harm, to threaten, and to intimidate."
"We, as a district, believe that social media companies must do more to protect and support our students when they use their product," the statement reads. "We believe that social media companies must do more to address threats and intimidation on their platforms. We believe that social media companies must do more to limit access to inappropriate material. To that end, the Lansing School District, along with hundreds of other districts across the country, is engaging in litigation. We look forward to the social media companies taking responsibility for their product and creating a safe environment for our children."
SEE ALSO: 'Profound risk of harm': Surgeon General issues warning about youth social media useWhile Lansing appears to be the only plaintiff in this case, it's not the only school district in the country suing social media companies. According to Education Week, Lansing is just one of 200 school districts that have sued social media companies for similar reasons. In March 2023, the San Mateo County School Board sued YouTube, Snapchat, and TikTok, alleging that social media sites make kids depressed and anxious, leading students to act out, which drains school resources. Other districts have joined consolidated lawsuits against the platforms.
"Teachers and school administrators have been at the front lines of addressing this crisis and are overburdened by the negative effects on their students — from how it has affected mental health to behavior in the classroom," Lexi Hazam, an attorney with Lieff, Cabraser, Heimann & Bernstein and co-lead counsel for the plaintiffs in a consolidated lawsuit, told Education Week. "Funds meant for educational purposes have been reallocated to address the misconduct of the corporations behind Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, YouTube, and Facebook. Social media companies should be held accountable and provide support to schools for the harms their products cause."
SEE ALSO: Instagram announces restrictive 'Teen Accounts' for users under 16There’s a long legal road ahead for Lansing, but it signals a continued fight for children and teens in the face of social media’s effect on their mental health.
Topics Facebook Google Instagram Snapchat TikTok Meta
Memes are bigger than Jesus (on Google, at least)Russell Westbrook has perfect reaction after belligerent NBA fan flips him offRIP Vine: Here's what users had to say about the platform's demiseRape survivor creates powerful photo series to break taboosHired wants finding a job to be like online dating, minus the ickTwitter will cut 350 employees as part of its path to profitabilityIndia will have a billion mobile phone users by 2020: GSMAA Cubs fan's World Series diary for Game 2: A big bounce back 'W'Kylie Jenner warns fans about dangerous fake Lip KitsVine's last tweet may have told us the end was nearThis 76ers fan is a perfect ambassador for the city of brotherly loveDude successfully face swaps with an Egyptian sphinxLet's not forget the black Vine stars that turned the app into an artHow the new MacBook Pros compare with Microsoft's Surface Book i7In energy milestone, renewables overtake coal for first timeThe first fossilized dinosaur brain was just identified in EnglandGoogle's mobile ads business is boomingApple takes down its online store ahead of MacBook unveiling eventA Cubs fan's World Series diary for Game 2: A big bounce back 'W'Apple says it needs 'more time' before releasing AirPods, won't say why How to download free ebooks and digital audiobooks from public libraries Amazon to sell its own face shields and this is normal now This app wants to analyse your texts to tell if your crush is into you Barbie debuts #ThankYouHeroes program, honoring first responders Porn streamed on a train station video display and commuters definitely noticed Headspace is now free for unemployed Americans The internet points out the many, many politicians who've had it worse than Donald Trump Chihuahua in graduation cap and gown earns bachelor's degree in cuteness Sleeping woman being wheeled around campus is truly a bizarre sight Elon Musk thanks Trump for supporting Tesla factory reopening Amazon's proposed federal anti Joe Biden, president of ice cream, is finally getting his own flavor Slack was down and the timing couldn't have been worse RIP Google Play Music: Users told to migrate to YouTube Music There's finally an easy way to see 'Retweets with Comments' on Twitter Apple now lists 2013 MacBook Air and 2014 MacBook Pro as 'vintage products' Twitter says new coronavirus misinformation rules will apply to Trump Use these five free Google Meet features to get the best video calls Watch an alligator eat a huge fish on a golf course in *DRUMROLL* Florida Teen wins the right to perform in drag at high school after classmates sign petition
2.3211s , 8224.796875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2017 Archives】,Feast Information Network