What the Meta and YouTube Verdict Means for Parents

What the Meta and YouTube Verdict Means for Parents
April 29, 2026
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Family
A jury just found Meta and YouTube liable for addicting children. Here's what parents who want something different can actually do about it.

What the Meta and YouTube Verdict Means for Parents

April 29, 2026

Last week a jury found Meta and YouTube liable for addicting children to their platforms. The plaintiff started YouTube at 6. She was on Instagram by 9.

This isn't a political story. It's a design story. These platforms were built to maximize time-on-screen. They work exactly as intended. And they work on kids.

If you're a parent, you've probably felt this. The fight to put the phone down at dinner. The blank stare after an hour of scrolling. The way a 10-year-old can recite TikTok sounds but can't describe what their grandparent's voice sounds like.

The algorithm isn't neutral

Every major platform runs on an engagement algorithm. Engagement means time spent. Time spent means ad revenue. The most effective way to keep someone on screen is to trigger an emotional response — anger, curiosity, fear, or the hollow feeling of comparison.

None of that is designed for children. None of it is designed for families.

The verdict doesn't change the platforms. But it does open a conversation that a lot of parents have been wanting to have: what does a healthy digital life look like for a family?

The alternative isn't going offline

The answer isn't to throw the phone out. Technology isn't the problem. The design is.

There's a version of technology that brings families closer instead of fragmenting attention. Where the goal is connection instead of engagement. Where there's no algorithm deciding what your kids see, no strangers in the feed, no ads.

That's what Kinnect is built for. It's a private space for your family to record stories, save recipes and memories, and leave messages for people who aren't born yet. No algorithm. No ads. Just the people you actually love.

If the verdict made you think about what your family's digital life looks like — that's a good place to start.

You can try Kinnect free for 14 days at kinnect.club. Founding memberships are open this weekend at $9.99/year.

What you can do this weekend

You don't need to solve the algorithm problem. You can't. But you can decide what technology you bring into your family's life intentionally.

Here's one concrete thing: this weekend, record one story from a grandparent or parent. Ask them one question about their life that you don't know the answer to. Save the audio.

That recording will matter more than anything in a scroll feed ever could. It'll still matter in 30 years.

The Meta verdict is a signal. The question is what you do with it.

Keep reading

OA

omar alvarez

Founder & CEO, Kinnect | Co-founder, Urge Candies

Omar Alvarez grew up in Chicago the son of Puerto Rican and Guatemalan immigrants. He went on to work at the headquarters of Nike, Levi's, and Hilton Hotels before co-founding Urge Candies and founding Kinnect. He builds things that bring communities and families together—whether through shared physical experiences (candy) or private digital spaces (Kinnect). He writes about memory, connection, and what it actually takes to keep the people you love close.

Kinnect is now LIVE!

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