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This Week in Tech 1077: I Would Download a Car

Meta and Google face mounting legal challenges as courts rule on platform addictiveness, signaling a potential shift in how tech companies are held accountable for user engagement practices.

Key points

  • Courts found Meta and Google liable for social media addictiveness, potentially triggering a wave of future litigation.
  • Anthropic secured a preliminary injunction against the Department of Defense regarding alleged First Amendment retaliation in AI contracting.
  • The Supreme Court ruled in favor of Cox, establishing that internet service providers are not liable for user-led copyright piracy.
  • Walmart announced plans to implement digital shelf pricing across all U.S. locations by the end of 2026.
  • A supply chain attack involving LiteLLM malware compromised approximately 47,000 AI developers.
  • GrapheneOS is actively resisting new age verification laws, citing concerns over user privacy and operating system compliance.
Why it matters

These legal developments suggest a tightening regulatory environment that could fundamentally alter the business models of major technology platforms. As courts weigh the liability of digital services, companies must navigate increasing scrutiny regarding user safety, data privacy, and the ethical deployment of artificial intelligence.

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