U.S. Court of Appeals UPHOLDS Florida’s Law Protecting Kids from Predatory, Addictive Social Media

TALLAHASSEE, FL — In a major win for Florida families, the U.S. Court of Appeals has upheld Florida’s pioneering law targeting predatory and addictive social-media practices, clearing the way for the state to enforce strict protections for minors and limit Big Tech’s ability to exploit young users for profit.

The decision marks one of the most significant legal victories yet in the national battle over tech regulation, granting Florida the authority to rein in platforms accused of knowingly designing algorithms that hook children into endless scrolling, targeted manipulation, and harmful content cycles.

Florida’s Attorney General celebrated the ruling, declaring that the state will “aggressively enforce this law to ensure Big Tech stops exploiting and harming children for profit.” State leaders said the ruling validates Florida’s ongoing efforts to set the national standard for child online safety.

The child-protection statute—one of the strongest in the country—forces social-media companies to:

  • Ban addictive algorithmic feeds for minors
  • Prohibit platforms from collecting sensitive data from underage users
  • Restrict nighttime usage and push alerts designed to keep kids online
  • Provide parents with new authority to manage or shut down their children’s accounts
  • Impose steep penalties for platforms that violate the law or attempt to bypass parental rights

Supporters say the legislation is a direct response to a documented mental-health crisis among American youth, driven in large part by compulsive social-media use and algorithm-amplified content exposing children to predators, self-harm, and exploitation.

For years, Big Tech has fought state-level attempts to impose guardrails on their platforms. Florida’s victory represents a massive crack in Silicon Valley’s legal armor, and experts say the case could influence similar legislation advancing in Texas, Utah, Tennessee, and other states.

Lawmakers argue that tech companies have long used “behavioral addiction engineering”—the same design strategies used in casinos—to keep minors online for as long as possible.

“The ruling confirms what Florida parents already knew,” said one senior state official. “These companies have put profit over children for years. That ends now.”

Following the Court of Appeals decision, Florida regulators are preparing immediate enforcement actions. State officials will begin issuing compliance notices to social-media companies, with fines expected for platforms that fail to change their practices.

More legal battles are expected as Big Tech firms consider appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court, but for now Florida’s law stands—a decisive win in the national fight to protect kids online.

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