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Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Live from NPR News, I'm Lakshmi Singh. A jury in Los Angeles has found that Meta and Google are to blame for the depression and anxiety of a woman who compulsively used social media as a small child. As NPR's Bobby Allen explains, it is the second major verdict this week in landmark social media trials.
A jury has awarded a woman $3 million for mental health struggles that developed after compulsive use of YouTube and Instagram. After a month-long trial, a jury found that Meta and Google deliberately designed social media platforms to addict young people.
Chapter 2: What recent verdicts have been made against social media companies?
The verdict comes a day after a separate jury in New Mexico ordered Meta to pay $375 million for failing to protect kids and teens from child predators on its platforms. The Los Angeles jury found that Meta and Google acted with malice, which means the case now moves to the punitive stage, where the amount of damages could be far more.
Google and Meta are vowing to fight the verdicts, which are the first-ever judgments against the social media industry over the harms of its platforms. Bobby Allen, NPR News, Los Angeles.
The White House says President Trump's postponing his trip to China by more than a month to mid-May and plans to host President Xi Jinping later this year. Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt announced the change a short time ago at a news briefing where she fielded questions about the Iran war. She was asked about Iranian state media reporting that the U.S.
put forward a 15-point plan to end the conflict in that area. Iran rejected it. Levitt says talks are ongoing, but the White House never confirmed that full plan.
There are elements of truth to it, but some of the stories I read were not entirely factual.
However, President Trump had referenced a 15-point plan earlier this week. Iran's continued refusal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz is intensifying concerns about global energy supplies and what that could mean for food prices in the U.S. specifically. As NPR's Windsor Johnson tells us, economists say consumers may not feel it right away, but some grocery items could be hit sooner than others.
Higher fuel and fertilizer costs are expected to ripple through the food supply chain, but not all at once. David Ortega is an economist at Michigan State University. He says energy prices are one of the biggest drivers, especially when it comes to transportation.
So where we're going to first start to see this show up are on the perishable food items. So think specialty produce, dairy products, meat products that have to be refrigerated. So refrigerated trucking uses up a lot more energy.
Ortega says there's often a lag of several months between rising input costs and higher prices at the grocery store, meaning shoppers may not feel the full impact until later this year. Windsor Johnston, NPR News.
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