How Social Media Platforms Targeted Houston’s Youth
Internal research papers, whistleblower disclosures, and documents produced during active litigation have revealed that companies including Meta (Instagram, Facebook), TikTok, Snap, and YouTube created systems specifically designed to maximize the time young users spend on their platforms — regardless of psychological cost.
These techniques include: infinite scrolling designed to remove natural stopping points; variable reward notifications calibrated to trigger compulsive checking behavior; algorithmic content amplification that surfaces increasingly extreme content to maintain engagement; and engagement-based ranking that rewards content generating strong emotional reactions, including content depicting self-harm, eating disorders, and dangerous challenges.
The U.S. Surgeon General issued a formal advisory in 2023 warning about the potential risks of social media to the mental health of children and adolescents — findings consistent with independent research from the American Psychological Association and peer-reviewed studies published in major medical journals. For Houston families who have seen these effects firsthand in their children, these findings confirmed what they already knew.
Injuries Houston Families Are Pursuing in Court
Social media addiction claims cover a range of serious, documented injuries:
Severe depression requiring hospitalization or intensive outpatient treatment
Anxiety and panic disorders, including social anxiety triggered or worsened by platform use
PTSD resulting from exposure to violent, exploitative, or traumatic content on these platforms
Eating disorders and body dysmorphia linked to algorithmically amplified diet culture and idealized body images
Self-harming behaviors connected to online communities that normalize self-injury
Suicidal ideation or attempts connected to cyberbullying, social comparison, or online exploitation
Sexual exploitation or abuse facilitated by platform features enabling contact between minors and adult predators
Accidental death tied to dangerous viral challenges promoted and amplified by platform algorithms
Qualifying Criteria for Houston 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
No older than 25 at time of signing
Suffered a documented injury: severe depression, anxiety, PTSD, eating disorder, body dysmorphia, self-harm, suicide attempt, drug overdose, sexual exploitation, or accidental death from an online challenge
Questions Dallas Families Ask
If your child has been injured by algorithmically designed addiction, we would like to hear your story. Contact Edward O. Moody, P.A. for a confidential consultation. Call 501-376-0000.

