The weight of the school board of Wake County is decreasing whether the social media companies have to sue, arguing that schools have to handle the collapse of psychological damage due to their apps.
Wake school will be included in a long list of boards that are already sueing companies such as Meta, Google, Bide and Snap. Eleven other northern Carolina School System-Sharoklenburg, Clinton City, and Camberland, Johnson, Wilson, Union, Robson, Moore, Wayne, Pitt and Rockingam are sueing companies in the counties, prosecuting hundreds of more people across the country.
And by December, at least 42 Attorney General, including the Northern Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein, had also filed a case.
The cases against social media companies have alleged that companies have failed to warn teenage users of their potential loss and have suffered psychological damage to users as an increase in food disorders, depression and anxiety. School boards have argued that they have been forced to remove educational expenses towards efforts to improve children’s mental health.
Other cases have been added to a national case before a federal court in Northern California. Wake County School Board will be involved in those cases.
The companies did not immediately respond to the request of the comment. Companies have earlier told the news media in statements that they have worked towards improving security for adolescence.
The process of wake in the social media case will be in the same way that the school board had sued the Jaul Labs and other electronic cigarettes, alleging that companies were marketing for teenagers. Those cases were also associated with other similar cases at the national level and they have been settled, to go to Wake Schools to go to teen vaporing to receive several million dollars.
On Tuesday, the school boards will listen to Janet Ward Black, Ward Black Law, and Matthew legs, or Beyard Mandals from Brockstad and Federico. They are two law firms that represent the districts of North Carolina and other schools beyond.
In a slideshow of the presentation, they are determined to give, lawyers argue that social media companies have prepared their products to prepare and they have caused users a crisis. This crisis falls into school, where students struggle and teachers try to help them with additional resources.