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Social Media Addiction in San Antonio, TX

If your child has been harmed by Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, YouTube, or Snapchat, you may have a case against these companies. Edward O. Moody, P.A. is here to help.

San Antonio has one of the youngest median-age populations among major Texas cities, a large and growing military family community, and a significant university student population. Across the North Side, the Southside, Stone Oak, and neighborhoods throughout Bexar County, parents are watching their children struggle with anxiety, depression, eating disorders, and self-harm — harm that researchers, federal courts, and the U.S. Surgeon General have increasingly connected to the deliberate behavioral engineering of social media platforms.

The companies that built these platforms knew they were psychologically harmful to adolescents. Internal documents now public in active litigation prove it. The law is starting to hold them accountable.

How Social Media Platforms Engineered Addiction in San Antonio Youth

Whistleblower testimony, internal research papers, and documents produced during ongoing federal litigation have established that Meta (Instagram, Facebook), TikTok, Snap, and YouTube built and deployed behavioral engineering systems specifically designed to maximize the time young users spend on their platforms — without regard for psychological harm.

These design features include: infinite scrolling that removes natural stopping points; variable reward notifications calibrated to trigger compulsive checking behavior in developing brains; algorithmic content amplification that surfaces increasingly extreme or emotionally charged content; and engagement-based ranking that rewards content generating strong reactions — including content depicting self-harm, extreme dieting, and dangerous challenges.

Meta’s own internal research — now part of the public record in active litigation — showed that Instagram could be damaging to the mental health and body image of teenage girls. The company continued to operate and refine its engagement systems after learning this. That knowledge is central to the legal claims being advanced on behalf of families nationwide.

Qualifying Criteria for San Antonio Families

Used Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, or Snapchat

Used the platform more than 3 hours per day on average

Began using the platform before age 18

Age 25 or younger at time of signing

Suffered a documented injury: severe depression, anxiety disorder, PTSD, eating disorder, body dysmorphia, self-harm, suicide attempt, drug overdose, sexual exploitation, or accidental death connected to an online challenge

FAQ

Yes. Military dependents have full access to civil courts to file personal injury and product liability claims, and those claims are entirely independent of military status or base housing. Your daughter’s documented depression and eating disorder treatment are important qualifying evidence. Please contact us for a confidential evaluation.

A parent or legal guardian can file on behalf of a minor child. The self-harm, the school counselor’s documentation, and the identified connection to TikTok self-harm communities are significant qualifying facts. Please contact us for a confidential evaluation of your son’s case.

We understand. The process begins with a single confidential phone call or form submission — there is no obligation. We evaluate your daughter’s case and explain what pursuing a claim involves, what documentation is needed, and what outcomes are realistic. You decide whether and how to proceed at every step. Many families find the process less burdensome than they expected, particularly because we handle the legal work and communications so you do not have to.

If your child has been injured by algorithmically designed addiction in San Antonio, we would like to hear your story. Contact Edward O. Moody, P.A. for a free confidential consultation. Call 501-376-0000.