Algorithmic liability and the new tobacco parallel

A landmark verdict against Meta and Google signals a shift toward holding algorithmic systems accountable for user harm
In March 2026, a Los Angeles jury delivered a $6 million verdict against Meta and Google in K.G.M. v. Meta Platforms, Inc. and Google LLC, marking the first of its kind to hold social media companies liable for harm caused by platform design. The plaintiff claimed that as a minor she had suffered anxiety and depression as a direct result of addictive features deliberately engineered into Facebook and YouTube. For lawyers advising technology, automotive, and financial services clients as well as private individuals, this verdict has significant potential implications. It signals that courts are beginning to hold algorithm-driven systems to account in a similar way in which they once held cigarette manufacturers accountable.
The shadow of tobacco
Early claims against cigarette manufacturers, including Green v. American Tobacco Co. (1963), were undone by causation difficulties and the absence of compelling internal evidence. Then, the disclosure of internal industry documents revealed that manufacturers had long known of nicotine's addictive properties but had chosen to suppress that knowledge. Once corporate knowledge could be proved, the litigation dynamic shifted irreversibly, culminating in a US$206 billion settlement that reshaped an industry and permanently redefined the duty corporations owe to consumers.
The structural parallels between those cases and what is happening today is remarkable. During the KGM trial, Meta employees testified that concerns about risks to children were raised internally over many years, yet the platforms were deliberately designed to maximise engagement among young users, which would in turn drive up advertising revenue. This was admitted to have been done notwithstanding the long-term psychological harm that would result. That pattern, corporate knowledge, internal suppression, and a product engineered to encourage dependency is precisely what drove tobacco litigation from isolated individual verdicts to industry-transforming group claims.
In the EU, instruments such as the EU AI Act and the revised Product Liability Directive provide the procedural and substantive architecture for aggregated claims against platform operators. Practitioners should not be asking whether comparable claims will emerge from algorithm-related harms. They should be asking when, and in what form. Given the potential impact of adverse precedent on the business model of tech companies as well as the level of punitive damages available in the US, a large proportion of these claims will likely be resolved through confidential settlements rather than through drawn-out public trials.
From public courts to arbitral tribunals
The KGM verdict and the tobacco parallel describe the trajectory of litigation, but the considerations are equally applicable to arbitration. Behind every platform there is a chain of commercial contracts between developers and deployers, technology companies and infrastructure providers. As part of the drive towards electrification, software development in the automotive sector now rivals traditional combustion-engine engineering in importance. Where an algorithm causes harm and liability is disputed within a supply chain, those disputes will frequently be resolved by arbitration. The cross-border dimension reinforces the point: a system manufactured in one jurisdiction, integrated in another, and causing harm in a third presents precisely the kind of multi-party complexity that international arbitration was designed to resolve.













