More than a dozen states sued TikTok for damaging the mental health of children

Built to be addictive
False commitment
Knowingly addictive
Dangerous
Body image and mental health
Hours of use
Bipartisan lawsuit
Separate courts
A troubled relationship
A pile of lawsuits
Data protection
Pushed to sell
Uncertain future
Built to be addictive

Thirteen states and the District of Columbia have sued TikTok, alleging the app knowingly abuses children and teenagers' mental health in the name of revenue.

False commitment

According to the New York Times, the states also alleged that the company falsely claims to limit screen time to 60 minutes for minors and carefully curate the content they see.

Knowingly addictive

The lawsuits say that internal company documents show that the company is aware of the addictiveness of its features for minors, and it continues to push its model to keep users engaged.

Dangerous

The plaintiffs also allege that thousands of children have used the app's live-streaming feature, which allows other users to send them rewards, incentivizing exploitation.

Body image and mental health

New York Attorney General Letitia James wrote in a statement that the company also features beauty filters that young girls can use, knowing their effects on their body image, NPR explains.

Hours of use

Finally, the states' attorneys general say the app is designed for children to lose track of time due to its never-ending scroll feature and push notifications.

"Disappointed"

The company said it has taken many steps to protect children and teens and tried to work with the states' attorneys, so the lawsuits were "disappointing," the NY Times reported.

Bipartisan lawsuit

The bipartisan group of attorneys general suing the app includes those from New York, California, DC, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Mississippi, North Carolina, New Jersey, Oregon, South Carolina, Vermont, and Washington.

Separate courts

Since they rely on specific consumer protection state laws, the authorities filed the documents separately in each state. The company will have to face 14 courts.

A troubled relationship

The lawsuit is just the latest proof of the troubled relationship between TikTok and US officials, who have raised concerns about the app's design, content, and Chinese parent company.

A pile of lawsuits

The new lawsuits add to another one the Department of Justice placed in August against the company, alleging it illegally collected data from children under 13.

Data protection

The New York Times said the lawsuit alleged TikTok allowed kids to open accounts, collected their data without parental consent, and, in some cases, did not honor their requests to delete their children's accounts.

Pushed to sell

Months before that, in April, President Biden signed a bill to ban TikTok nationwide if its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, doesn't sell the US app before January 19.

Uncertain future

The company's problems are accumulating in the US, making its future uncertain in the country. Hundreds of influencers have campaigned against its ban.

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