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Sunday, June 28, 2026

"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.