Latest News and Comment from Education

Sunday, June 28, 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JUNE 28, 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JUNE 28, 2026

Here are today's (June 28, 2026) top news stories in each specified category, based on current reporting. These are drawn from major outlets and focus on prominent, timely developments. Categories are kept separate.

U.S. NEWS

  • Wildfires and flooding disasters: Evacuations ordered in Utah due to the destructive Cottonwood fire; Kentucky Governor declares emergency amid widespread flooding and rising waters impacting much of the state. Red flag warnings in the West.
  • Venezuela earthquake response: U.S. coverage of rescue efforts after devastating quakes; death toll rising with challenges from aftershocks and logistics.
  • July 4th preparations in D.C.: Fencing around the Reflecting Pool and other security measures for America's 250th anniversary celebrations, alongside a massive fireworks display.
  • Colorado governor primary: Focus on Trump influence and candidates positioning against him.
  • Protests and social issues: Pro-transgender candidate chased from event over Gaza views; other local tensions.
  • Extreme Weather Emergencies: Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear has declared a state of emergency, warning residents to stay off roads as severe flooding inundates the majority of the state. Meanwhile, in the West, residents in Utah face mandatory evacuations due to the rapidly spreading Cottonwood fire, which is already being cited as one of the most destructive wildfires in the state's history.

  • Texas Mandates Bible Study: Public school districts across Texas are bracing for immediate legal challenges following a state mandate requiring Bible study implementation across all grade levels.

  • FAA Investigates Runway Near-Miss: The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) launched an official investigation into a near-collision incident involving commercial aircraft on the tarmac at Miami International Airport.

  • FDA Upgrades Potato Chip Recall: The FDA elevated its recall notice for Utz potato chips to a higher severity level due to potential salmonella contamination risks.

POLITICS

  • Trump-backed wins in Louisiana: Rep. Julia Letlow secures GOP Senate runoff victory with strong Trump endorsement, advancing MAGA influence.
  • Supreme Court rulings: Decisions favoring Trump admin on immigration/asylum (e.g., turning back seekers) and other issues like protections for certain immigrants or herbicide cases.
  • White House actions on civil service/AI: Efforts to influence boards against politicization claims, plus executive pushes on AI innovation/security.
  • Immigration and ICE: New director nomination and ongoing policy shifts.
  • Student loan/education policy: New limits and court blocks on restrictions, tied to broader admin moves.
  • SCOTUS Ruling Hands Trump a Win: A new Supreme Court decision has handed a major legal victory to President Donald Trump regarding federal executive authority, shaping the immediate landscape for the upcoming midterm elections.

  • GOP Disagreements on Housing Bill: Distinct strategic daylight has emerged between the Trump administration and Congressional Republicans regarding the policy focus of a high-profile national housing bill, signaling policy friction ahead of the midterms.

  • House Democrats Push to Impeach McMahon: House Democrats have officially advanced efforts to impeach Education Secretary Linda McMahon, citing the systematic dismantling and restructuring of the federal Department of Education.

  • John Bolton Pleads Guilty: Former National Security Adviser John Bolton entered a guilty plea in federal court regarding a high-profile classified documents investigation.

WORLD AFFAIRS

  • U.S.-Iran escalation: Iran launches attacks on U.S. sites in Bahrain/Kuwait in response to strikes; Trump warns of further action; fragile truce/ceasefire talks strained, with Hormuz tensions.
  • Venezuela earthquakes: Massive rescue efforts ongoing after twin quakes; high death toll, international aid mobilized amid challenges.
  • Kazakhstan/U.S. mining deal: Trump-linked interests in major tungsten reserves; deepening ties praised by Kazakhstan leader.
  • Other global incidents: Plane crash in China/France reports; European heatwave records; ongoing Ukraine/Russia developments.
  • Fragile U.S.-Iran Ceasefire Tested: Following a series of naval incidents near the critical Strait of Hormuz, the U.S. military launched airstrikes against Iranian drone facilities and communication networks. In rapid retaliation, Iran targeted U.S. infrastructure in Bahrain and Kuwait, including the headquarters of the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet. Both sides are trading accusations of violating the recently signed 14-point truce.

  • Venezuela Earthquake Death Toll Mounts: The confirmed death toll from two massive earthquakes in Venezuela has risen past 1,430 people. Rescuers are in a race against time to pull survivors from the rubble, prompting the U.S. to authorize an additional nine-figure emergency humanitarian aid package.

  • Trump Threatens European Digital Tax Tariffs: The White House announced a proposal for a 100% tariff on goods from European countries that impose independent digital taxes on American tech firms.

  • Nigel Farage Brings Anti-WHO Campaign to U.S.: British political figure Nigel Farage has officially expanded his campaign against the World Health Organization to the United States, appointing several prominent conservative American allies to his advocacy board.

EDUCATION

  • Student loan limits debate: New federal caps on grad loans (e.g., nursing) blocked by court; economists discuss impact on tuition costs.
  • Dept. of Education shifts: Moves on special ed/civil rights enforcement; ongoing investigations and waivers for states.
  • School safety/mental health: Focus on bullying as top reason for school switches; AI in classrooms support rising but concerns remain; wellness centers expansion.
  • Local/curriculum news: Bible stories in Texas; AI playbook delays in NYC; various state board actions.
  • Federal Court Pauses Grad Student Loan Caps: A federal judge temporarily blocked a key component of the administration's new student loan restrictions. The ruling halts the Education Department’s plan to cap borrowing limits for specific graduate and professional degrees (such as medical and law programs).

  • Microsoft Releases 2026 AI Education Report: Unveiled ahead of the ISTELive 26 conference, Microsoft's annual data shows that 92% of students and 88% of educators are now actively using AI for school operations, sparking widespread calls from school leaders for formal, monthly role-based training and strict academic integrity guardrails.

  • UN Issues Warnings on Severe Global Learning Losses: A sobering UN News report reveals that 258 million children worldwide are currently shut out of school due to climate shocks, displacement, and geopolitical conflicts—with reading proficiency dropping to just 30% by Grade 6 in active conflict zones.

  • HUD Urges Higher-Ed to End Affinity Housing: The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) sent an official guidance letter to American colleges and universities strongly urging them to phase out themed "affinity" housing programs to ensure compliance with housing equity standards.

ECONOMY

  • GDP and consumer data: Q1 2026 GDP growth at 2.1%; consumer confidence edging down amid Middle East price pressures.
  • Market reactions: Tech volatility and global stocks influenced by geopolitics (e.g., Iran/Hormuz disruptions affecting oil/shipping).
  • Iran-related economic moves: Resumption of trade with UAE; broader impacts from conflict on global economy.
  • Longer-term outlook: IMF/analyst notes on growth amid war shadows, inflation, and tech investment.
  • BIS Warns of Financial Pressure Points: The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) released its flagship Annual Economic Report, warning central banks that near-record public debt, heavily leveraged AI investments, and the lingering economic impacts of the recent Strait of Hormuz closure present major risks to global market stability.

  • U.S. Farm Income Expected to Drop: Data from the Kansas City Fed's Agricultural Credit Survey indicates the U.S. agricultural sector is navigating its 12th consecutive quarter of an economic downturn, with the USDA projecting a $1.2 billion decline in net farm income for the year.

  • Mortgage Refinance Rates See a Dip: Providing a brief window of relief for homeowners, the average 30-year fixed refinance rate dropped by 8 basis points this week to 6.62%, down from its recent peaks.

TECHNOLOGY

  • AI developments: Trump admin releases Anthropic models for broad use; new models from OpenAI/others; governance and export discussions.
  • Executive AI policy: White House orders promoting innovation/security in advanced AI.
  • Chip/startup news: OpenAI in-house chips; Asian AI models advancing amid restrictions.
  • Space/tech markets: SpaceX/related stock movements and hype around orbital projects.
  • Anthropic Captures Dominant AI Coding Market Share: New market analysis indicates the generative AI coding tool market has surged to $9.3 billion. Anthropic’s "Claude Code" is currently leading the industry with a dominant 40% market share, pacing the company toward commercial profitability.

  • Apple Highlights AFM 3 Infrastructure Realities: Tech analysts noted that Apple's newly announced third-generation Foundation Models (AFM 3) highlight a unique infrastructure bottleneck, as its private cloud computing models are trained via Google Gemini distillation and deployed using Nvidia chips hosted on Google Cloud infrastructure.

  • Electric Aviation Scale-Up Squeezes Local Talent: As publicly traded electric aviation firm Beta Technologies expands its workforce past 1,400 employees, smaller manufacturing and traditional aerospace businesses report severe struggles to survive amid a tightening pool of specialized technical labor.

HEALTH

  • Measles outbreaks: Over 2,100 U.S. cases in 2026, mostly outbreak-associated.
  • Marijuana/mental health study: Links teen use to doubled risk of serious mental illness.
  • Other research: Vitamin B12 therapy for brain cancer; belly fat triggers with aging; ongoing Ebola concerns internationally.
  • Vaccine/policy notes: Federal guidelines and reviews continuing.
  • HHS Expands Electronic Health Network: The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced that the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA) has crossed a historic milestone, securely exchanging over 1 billion health records nationwide to improve patient care portability.

  • WHO Demands Expanded Newborn Screenings: The World Health Organization launched a global campaign urging member nations to rapidly scale up universal newborn screening protocols, proving that early detection of conditions like congenital hypothyroidism and sickle-cell disease drastically alters child survival rates.

  • FDA Proposes Strict Tobacco Establishment Registry: The FDA formally published a proposed rule seeking to heavily standardize the exact formatting, structural content, and mandatory procedures for tobacco product listings and establishment registrations.

SPORTS

  • FIFA World Cup 2026: Group stage wrap-up; knockouts begin (e.g., DR Congo advances); standout performances like Messi; U.S./co-host action.
  • NBA Draft: Recent highlights with top picks.
  • Other: Various qualifiers, baseball (e.g., College World Series), and ongoing league news.
  • 2026 World Cup Group Play Concludes: Group stages are officially finalized for the FIFA World Cup hosted in the United States. In the final matches, Lionel Messi set a record by scoring in 7 consecutive World Cup matches, Congo sealed a knockout spot by defeating Uzbekistan 3-1, and Austria narrowly eliminated Iran with a last-second goal.

  • NHL Draft Makes History with Top Pick and Twin Selection: The Montreal Canadiens made waves by selecting Penn State forward Gavin McKenna with the No. 1 overall pick. Meanwhile, the Pittsburgh Penguins created the biggest story of the second round by drafting Markus Rusk at No. 39—reuniting him with his twin brother, Liam, whom the Penguins drafted in the first round on Friday.

  • NBA Summer League Marquee Matchups Set: The NBA officially locked in its high-profile Las Vegas Summer League opening schedule, which features direct head-to-head matchups between this year's top four draft picks.

News evolves quickly, especially with ongoing conflicts and disasters—check reliable sources for updates.


EDUCATION SPECIAL

TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

Here are the major education news headlines making waves right now in the United States and globally.

🇺🇸 Top US Education News

1. Devolution Acceleration: ED Expands Interagency Agreements to Shrink Footprint

Education Secretary Linda McMahon has signed four new Interagency Agreements (IAAs)—bringing the total to 14—shifting major federal educational programs over to the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services (HHS), and Justice (DOJ).

  • The Shift: HHS will now assist in managing grants for the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and Special Olympics, while the DOJ takes on civil rights enforcement and student privacy (FERPA) complaints.

  • The Goal: The administration states this is a strategic move to shrink the federal Department of Education's footprint, bypassing formal elimination by shifting core duties directly to other departments while returning primary authority to states.

2. House Democrats Move to Impeach Secretary McMahon

In a direct response to the aggressive restructuring and systematic dismantling of the Department of Education, House Democrats have officially filed a motion to impeach Education Secretary Linda McMahon. Critics argue that fracturing federal oversight weakens civil rights protections, while supporters maintain the actions are legal under the Economy Act and restore local authority.

3. Texas Formally Mandates Bible Passages for 5 Million Public School Students

The Republican-controlled Texas State Board of Education gave final approval to a sweeping new statewide reading list.

  • The Mandate: Starting with elementary school rollouts and hitting full implementation by 2030, the curriculum requires public school students to read specific excerpts from the Bible (such as Genesis, Psalms, and Jonah).

  • The Backlash: Opponents argue the mandate flagrantly breaches the constitutional separation of church and state, while proponents defend it as a foundational study of Judeo-Christian historical and literary influence on America's founding.

4. Federal Court Blocks Graduate Loan Restrictions

A federal court has issued a temporary pause on the Department of Education's recent attempt to cap federal loan limits for "professional" graduate degrees (such as medical and legal paths). Advocacy groups and medical schools argued the caps would choke off the pipeline for vital healthcare professionals, driving students to high-interest private lenders.

5. National K-12 Poll: Bullying Overtakes Academics for School Switching

The latest June 2026 EdChoice/Morning Consult polling reveals a massive shift in parental priorities. For the first time, bullying (33%) and excessive stress/anxiety (27%) have overtaken "academic needs not being met" as the primary reasons parents pull their children out of their current schools. Additionally, parental support for AI tools in the classroom has risen to 60%.

🌐 Top World Education News

1. UN Report: Global Learning Losses Threaten an "Entire Generation"

A major report titled Breaking Barriers: Understanding Educational Exclusion in Crises, released by the UN global fund Education Cannot Wait (ECW), warns of an unfolding global emergency.

  • The Data: An estimated 258 million school-aged children and adolescents worldwide are currently having their education disrupted by conflict, forced displacement, and climate shocks.

  • Out of School: Out of those affected, 93 million children are completely out of school, with the crisis heavily concentrated in the 20 highest-severity emergency zones (including Sudan, Gaza, and parts of the Sahel region).

  • The Literacy Gap: The report highlights a stark divergence: by Grade 6, basic reading proficiency reaches just 30% in conflict-affected nations, compared to 63% in areas facing natural disasters.

2. Displaced Girls and Disabled Children Face Highest Educational Barriers

The ECW data tracks a widening gap in educational progression for internally displaced people (IDP) and refugees across nations like Burkina Faso, Mali, Somalia, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Displaced children show significantly lower promotion rates, with girls and children with disabilities facing the highest rates of permanent school withdrawal. ECW is calling for urgent localized funding, emphasizing that families still heavily prioritize education but are physically and financially blocked by systemic crises.


Will new graduate student loan limits drive down tuition? : NPR https://www.npr.org/2026/06/28/nx-s1-5805988/cost-education-student-loan-tuition-graduate-school 

Trump Wants to Own the Nation’s 250th Birthday. States Have Their Own Plans. - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/28/arts/250-american-history-states-trump.html 

The AI Politics of 2028 Are Starting Now - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2026/06/28/raimondo-holcomb-q-a-00977932 

The Supreme Court Is Building Its Own Massive Police Force - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2026/06/28/supreme-court-justices-security-police-00969784 

Our Climate Models Are Missing Something Crucial – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/environment/2026/06/climate-models-missing-data-nature-natural-emissions-wetlands-wildfire-permafrost-methane-co2-projections/ 



"LIKE, SUBSCRIBE, AND LOBBY YOUR CONGRESSMAN": THE TECH ACCOUNTABILITY RECKONING NOBODY IN SILICON VALLEY WANTED


"LIKE, SUBSCRIBE, AND LOBBY YOUR CONGRESSMAN"

THE TECH ACCOUNTABILITY RECKONING NOBODY IN SILICON VALLEY WANTED

How Mark Zuckerberg's empire went from "connecting the world" to begging Sacramento for a hall pass — while parents, juries, and schoolkids are done playing along.

The Second Amendment Gambit Nobody Asked For

Picture this: Mark Zuckerberg, in his carefully cultivated "I am a normal human man who enjoys MMA and Hawaiian sunsets" persona, strides into a Senate hearing room and drops the legal argument of the century.

"The Founders would have protected Instagram," he says, with the confidence of a man who has never once doubted his own WiFi signal. "If the internet existed in 1787, the Second Amendment would have read: 'A well-regulated newsfeed, being necessary to the security of a free engagement rate, the right of the people to keep and bear algorithmic recommendation engines shall not be infringed.'"

The logic, as Zuckerberg's legal team apparently sees it, is airtight: guns were around when the Constitution was written, so guns got constitutional protection. Meta was not around when the Constitution was written, so Meta got Section 230 — a 1996 liability shield so powerful it essentially let tech companies operate like a landlord who rents apartments to arsonists and then claims he never touched the matches.

But here's the thing about that argument: the arsonists have now burned down enough houses that the juries are starting to notice.

From "Move Fast and Break Things" to "Move Fast and Break Children"

Let's review the bidding, because the last 90 days have been genuinely extraordinary for anyone who has been watching the slow-motion collision between Big Tech's business model and the concept of childhood.

March 24, 2026 — Albuquerque, New Mexico: A jury hits Meta with a $375 million penalty for misleading the public about child safety and willfully failing to address sexual exploitation on its platforms. Meta, apparently deciding that accountability is worse than no service at all, threatens to pull its apps from the entire state of New Mexico. New Mexico, for its part, does not appear to have collapsed into the Rio Grande.

March 25, 2026 — Los Angeles, California: In K.G.M. v. Meta et al., a 10-2 jury finds Meta and Google's YouTube civilly liable for negligently engineering their platforms to addict children. Kaley, now 20, testified she was hooked on YouTube at age 6 and Instagram at age 9. The jury awarded $6 million in damages — $4.2 million from Meta, $1.8 million from Google — and, crucially, found the companies liable for product design, not user content. Section 230, the tech industry's beloved "get out of lawsuit free" card, did not apply. The judge said so explicitly.

The punitive damages finding — which legally requires proof of malice, oppression, or fraud — is perhaps the most damning detail. Twelve ordinary Californians sat in a courtroom, heard the evidence, and concluded that these companies knew and chose not to care.

The internal documents didn't help. Jurors saw a paper trail showing executives were explicitly warned that algorithmic features exploited teenage vulnerabilities — and chose engagement metrics anyway. They also saw a 35-foot collage of hundreds of heavily filtered selfies Kaley had posted while spiraling into body dysmorphia. Thirty-five feet of evidence is hard to explain away with a press release about "parental controls."

The Tobacco Playbook, Now Available in Dark Mode

Here is where Zuckerberg's team reveals that they have, in fact, been paying attention to history — just not the lessons most people would draw from it.

Facing over 2,000 active lawsuits and the dawning realization that state-by-state litigation could eventually force them to actually redesign their products, Meta has executed what legal scholars are already calling the Tobacco Playbook with a better UI.

The move: lobby Congress to insert immunity language into the very child safety bill designed to stop you.

The vehicle: the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), a bipartisan bill that passed the Senate 91-3 in 2024 — one of the most lopsided votes in recent congressional history — before stalling in the House, where it has been quietly disassembled like a LEGO set by a toddler with corporate funding.

Meta's proposed language, reviewed by Reuters, would make platforms immune from suit "under state law with respect to all claims for loss caused by, arising out of, relating to, or resulting from the safety or privacy of individuals under the age of eighteen online."

Read that again slowly. That language would not just pause the lawsuits. It would retroactively vaporize them — every grieving parent, every school district, every state attorney general, gone, the moment a president signs the bill.

Meta's spokesperson called this "establishing uniform national standards." Consumer advocates called it something less printable.

Senator Marsha Blackburn's office, when asked about the proposed immunity language, responded with the kind of bluntness that Washington rarely produces: they hadn't seen it, and "would never consider it."

Meanwhile, in Sacramento, Meta lobbyists were simultaneously approaching California Senate Judiciary Chair Tom Umberg with draft amendments to AB 2 — a state bill threatening fines of up to $1 million per child for platforms found liable for negligent product design. The amendments would offer a "safe harbor" if companies activate a suite of default safety settings: disabling autoplay, silencing nighttime notifications, blocking DMs from unknown adults.

It is, in other words, the same deal Meta has been offering for years: "We will voluntarily do the minimum version of what you're trying to legally require us to do, in exchange for you never being able to legally require us to do anything."

Assemblymember Josh Lowenthal, who authored AB 2, has seen this movie before. Meta deployed nearly identical lobbying tactics against his previous, nearly identical bill — and that bill was quietly pulled after "tech-friendly amendments" appeared that happened to match Meta's requested language word for word. Funny how that works.

Meanwhile, in the Actual Schools

While Zuckerberg's legal team was busy drafting constitutional theories and immunity clauses, the people who actually spend their days with children were arriving at their own conclusions — without the benefit of a $100 billion lobbying budget.

In New York City, the parent advocacy group Class Size Matters — which has been fighting for smaller classrooms and student privacy since long before "algorithm" was a household word — has been pushing hard for a moratorium on AI in schools. In June 2026, a majority of NYC Council members formally urged the Mayor to call that moratorium. The group's founder, Leonie Haimson, testified before the DOE about what she described as "shoddy privacy and AI policies." The hearing, by all accounts, produced more lowlights than highlights.

The Parent Coalition for Student Privacy, a project of Class Size Matters, has been sounding the alarm on student data since 2014, when they helped kill inBloom — a massive student database designed to share children's personal information with for-profit data-mining vendors. They won that fight. They are now watching a new generation of edtech tools arrive in classrooms with the same fundamental question unanswered: who owns the data, and what are they doing with it?

In Los Angeles, the nation's second-largest school district has moved to ban screens for its youngest students — a decision that would have seemed radical five years ago and now seems, to many parents, like the most obvious thing in the world.

The contrast is almost too neat: in Washington and Sacramento, lobbyists are fighting over which legal language will best protect a company's right to serve infinite scroll to a nine-year-old. In New York and Los Angeles, parents and teachers are asking whether the nine-year-old should have a screen in front of them at all.

The Reckoning Is Structural, Not Rhetorical

Here is what makes this moment genuinely different from the previous decade of congressional hearings where senators asked Mark Zuckerberg how Facebook makes money and he explained, slowly, that it sells advertising:

The legal theory has changed.

For thirty years, Section 230 worked because plaintiffs attacked platforms as publishers of harmful content. Courts kept ruling that platforms don't write the posts, so they can't be sued for the posts. The tech industry built an entire civilization on that distinction.

The new lawsuits don't attack the content. They attack the product. The algorithm is not a neutral pipe through which content flows — it is an engineered system, designed by engineers, tested by data scientists, optimized for a specific outcome (maximum engagement), and sold to advertisers. When that engineered system is found to exploit the neurological vulnerabilities of a 13-year-old girl, it is not a content moderation problem. It is a product defect.

Judge Carolyn Kuhl, in denying Meta and Google's post-trial motions in the K.G.M. case, made this explicit: the case was about product engineering, not user expression. Section 230 does not apply.

That ruling is the crack in the dam. Everything Meta is doing right now — the congressional lobbying, the California amendments, the New Mexico threats — is an attempt to plug that crack before the dam breaks entirely.

The Bottom Line

Mark Zuckerberg does not actually believe Meta deserves Second Amendment protection. That is a satirical premise, and he is a man with too many lawyers to say something that unambiguous in public.

But the underlying argument — "we were not around when the rules were written, so the rules shouldn't apply to us" — is one his company has been making in various forms since 2004. The rules of product liability don't apply because we're a platform, not a product. The rules of publishing don't apply because we're a platform, not a publisher. The rules of child safety don't apply because we have a parental controls page.

What is new, in the spring and summer of 2026, is that juries are disagreeing. Courts are disagreeing. State legislatures are disagreeing. And the parents of New York City and Los Angeles, who did not go to law school and do not have a lobbying budget, are disagreeing in the most direct way available to them: by showing up to hearings, rallying in the streets, and asking their city councils to simply stop.

The Founders, for what it's worth, wrote the Second Amendment to protect citizens from the unchecked power of institutions that had grown too large and too dangerous to be held accountable by ordinary means.

The irony writes itself.

Sources: Reuters (June 18, 2026); Politico (June 26, 2026; March 25, 2026); Class Size Matters (classsizematters.org); Parent Coalition for Student Privacy (studentprivacymatters.org). All jury verdicts and legislative details are drawn from contemporaneous reporting.

The parents movement that banned cellphones has a new target - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/27/schools-classroom-screentime-pushback-00974778 

Sources & Links

Here is the complete sourced reference list for the article, organized by category.


⚖️ Legal Verdicts & Litigation

  1. Meta, YouTube Found Liable for Social Media Addiction in Landmark Trial Politico — March 25, 2026 https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/25/meta-youtube-found-liable-for-social-media-addiction-in-landmark-trial-00844625

🏛️ Meta Lobbying & Legislative Maneuvering

  1. EXCLUSIVE: Meta Lobbies Congress for Protection from Child-Harm Lawsuits Reuters — June 18, 2026 https://www.reuters.com/world/meta-lobbies-congress-protection-child-harm-lawsuits-2026-06-18/

  2. EXCLUSIVE: Meta Asks California Lawmakers for Shield from Child Harm Penalties Politico — June 26, 2026 https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/26/exclusive-meta-asks-california-lawmakers-for-shield-from-child-harm-penalties-00978728


👨‍👩‍👧 Parent & Student Advocacy Organizations

  1. Class Size Matters — NYC Parent Advocacy, AI Moratorium Campaign & Student Privacy classsizematters.org https://classsizematters.org/

  2. Parent Coalition for Student Privacy — About Us studentprivacymatters.org https://studentprivacymatters.org/about-us/


📌 Key Legislative Reference

  1. Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) — Introduced by Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) and Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), 2022. Passed Senate 91–3 in 2024. Currently contested in the House as part of the broader KIDS Act package.

  2. California AB 2 — Authored by Assemblymember Josh Lowenthal (D-Long Beach). Proposes fines of up to $1 million per child for platforms found liable for negligent product design. Senate Judiciary Committee hearing pending as of publication date.