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      Home»Opinion»The Reckoning for Big Tech’s Exploitation of America’s Children
      Opinion

      The Reckoning for Big Tech’s Exploitation of America’s Children

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      There was a time when parents worried about what their kids were doing outside the home—who they were with, where they were going, and what dangers might be lurking just beyond their sight. Today, that threat doesn’t wait outside. It lives inside the home, in the glowing screens we handed our children under the promise of connection, education, and harmless entertainment. Now, a court ruling confirming that Facebook knew its platform was addictive—and particularly harmful to children—has stripped away any remaining illusion of innocence. What many suspected has been validated in stark terms: this wasn’t negligence. It was calculated.

      The most troubling aspect of this ruling is not simply that harm occurred. It’s that the harm was understood, studied, and ultimately tolerated in pursuit of profit. That distinction matters. It places Facebook—and by extension much of Big Tech—not in the category of innovators who failed to foresee consequences, but in the far more troubling category of corporations that knowingly placed financial gain over the well-being of young users.

      Let’s be honest about what “addictive by design” really means. It means algorithms engineered to exploit the developing brains of children, leveraging dopamine-driven feedback loops—likes, shares, endless scrolling—to keep them hooked. It means content prioritization systems that feed users increasingly extreme or emotionally charged material because it keeps them engaged longer. It means a digital ecosystem where the goal is not enrichment, but entrapment.

      For years, executives from these companies stood before Congress and the public, offering carefully worded reassurances. They spoke of safety tools, parental controls, and their commitment to user well-being. But behind the scenes, internal research told a very different story—one that revealed rising anxiety, depression, and self-esteem issues among young users, especially teenage girls. And instead of sounding the alarm, they buried the findings.

      That is not a gray area. That is a moral failure.

      From a conservative perspective, this moment should serve as both a warning and a call to action—but not the kind of action that reflexively expands government control. The answer is not to hand more power to bureaucracies that are often just as opaque and unaccountable as the corporations they would regulate. Instead, it is to reassert foundational principles: accountability, transparency, and the primacy of the family.

      First, accountability. If a company knowingly creates a product that harms children, it should face meaningful consequences. Civil liability must have teeth. Shareholders, executives, and boards need to understand that there is a cost to prioritizing engagement metrics over human well-being. The market only functions properly when bad actors are forced to reckon with the damage they cause.

      Second, transparency. Parents cannot protect their children from dangers they cannot see. Tech companies should be required to disclose internal research related to user harm—especially when it involves minors. Sunlight is not just the best disinfectant; it is the bare minimum when dealing with products that shape the mental and emotional development of an entire generation.

      Third, and perhaps most importantly, the restoration of parental authority. For too long, families have been expected to navigate an increasingly complex digital landscape without the tools or information necessary to do so effectively. Parents must be empowered—not sidelined—with real control over what their children access and how they engage online. That includes clear, enforceable age verification standards and default protections for minors, not opt-in features buried deep in settings menus.

      There is also a broader cultural dimension that cannot be ignored. The rise of addictive social media platforms coincided with a decline in real-world community, personal responsibility, and face-to-face interaction. While technology did not cause this shift entirely, it has certainly accelerated it. Reversing course will require more than policy changes; it will require a renewed commitment to values that prioritize human connection over digital convenience.

      The court’s ruling should not be viewed as an endpoint, but as a turning point. It confirms what critics have argued for years: that Big Tech’s business model is not neutral. It is designed to capture attention, monetize behavior, and, when necessary, disregard the collateral damage.

      Children should never be collateral damage.

      If this moment leads to genuine reform—if it forces both corporations and society to confront the consequences of unchecked technological power—then it may yet serve a purpose. But that outcome is not guaranteed. It will depend on whether leaders, parents, and citizens are willing to demand better and refuse to accept a system that profits from the vulnerability of the next generation.

      The truth is now out in the open. The only question that remains is whether we will act on it—or scroll past and pretend it isn’t there.

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