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Interview Only w/ Mark Lanier & Rahul Ravipudi - Winning A Landmark Case Against Big Tech
Description
Veteran trial lawyers Mark Lanier and Rahul Ravipudi — the legal team that just won a landmark bellwether verdict against Meta and YouTube — join the Chuck Toddcast to explain how civil litigation is doing more to rein in big tech than the federal government has managed in a decade. They walk through how they persuaded a jury that these platforms engaged in negligent and punitive conduct toward children, systematically dismantling the "it's on the parents" defense by showing that parents simply aren't equipped to manage what amounts to engineered addiction — and that when that addiction takes hold in children, it causes irreparable harm by literally rewiring developing brains. They reveal that Meta's own internal research documents were devastating at trial, that former tech employees took the stand to call out the companies' safety practices, and that these platforms behaved exactly like Big Tobacco did — knowing the harm was real and burying the evidence. They break down how they proved addiction by design: endless scroll, autoplay, slot-machine psychology, and deliberately hidden safety features all created to maximize "time spent," a corporate metric fundamentally at odds with user wellbeing.
The conversation gets into the nuts and bolts of the legal strategy and what comes next. Lanier and Ravipudi describe cross-examining Mark Zuckerberg, who they say couldn't handle basic questions about protecting kids, and explain why YouTube's defense — that it's a streaming service like Netflix rather than social media — collapsed once its own internal documents consistently referred to the platform as "social media." They explain that this is a bellwether case, meaning the judge used nine representative cases to establish facts and conditions that will now apply to roughly 3,000 other pending cases, with eight more trials coming and a settlement fund likely in the companies' future. The attorneys discuss whether tech companies are simply pricing these verdicts in as a cost of doing business (they argue settling would actually be a PR boon for the platforms), draw parallels and distinctions between big tech and tobacco, and offer concrete policy recommendations: a meaningful minimum age requirement, scrapping Section 230, nighttime curfews for minors, and removing the endless scroll. Their bottom line: tech companies won't do the right thing unless they're forced to, and the legal system is finally catching up to what regulators refused to address.
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Timeline:
(Timestamps may vary based on advertisements)
00:00 Mark Lanier & Rahul Ravipudi join the Chuck ToddCast
02:30 Civil litigation is doing more to rein in big tech than government
03:00 You can’t fight big tech without an army of lawyers
04:00 Meta & Youtube found liable by jury of negligence & punitive conduct
05:30 How did you push back on the narrative of “parental challenges”?
06:30 Parents aren’t equipped to control kids social media addiction/use
07:15 Addiction in children is an irreparable harm, brain is rewired
08:15 Meta’s own internal research documents were damning
09:30 Without guardrails, tech companies race to the bottom for engagement
10:30 Tech companies behaved just like big tobacco, knew harm was real
12:00 Former tech employees called out safety practices at trial
13:00 How did you prove addiction at trial?
14:15 Proved the companies deliberate