Social media giants lose bid to have lawsuit from Ontario school boards dropped
- More Ontario school boards have filed lawsuits against social media companies, arguing that their products harm children's education and well-being.
- An Ontario superior court has allowed the school boards' case against Meta, Snapchat, and TikTok to proceed after rejecting the companies' motion to dismiss.
- The legal actions, initiated in March 2024, now involve several Ontario school boards seeking damages for the impact of social media on education.
- Plaintiffs claim social media platforms are negligently designed and disrupt learning, while the companies assert a commitment to youth well-being.
35 Articles
35 Articles


Technology ‘being weaponised’ against schools and teachers – union leader
Manny Botwe, president of the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL), will call for an end to the ‘chaos’ caused by social media.
Ontario school boards lawsuit against social-media giants to continue
Social-media giants Meta, Snapchat and TikTok have lost a legal challenge attempting to throw out a multibillion-dollar lawsuit launched by the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board, the Ottawa Catholic School Board and a dozen other school boards across Ontario.
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