Épisodes

  • I've sued i-Ready | Answering your questions (with attorney Andy Liddell)
    Apr 6 2026

    So…I’ve sued another EdTech company. Here's a direct link to information on the lawsuit.


    This time, it’s Curriculum Associates — the multi-billion-dollar maker of i-Ready, used by more than 14 million children in grades K–8, including my own.


    In this episode, I break down why we’ve filed a lawsuit alleging that Curriculum Associates’ core business model depends on harvesting massive amounts of student data, monetizing it, and allegedly sharing children’s personal information with dozens of third parties for commercial purposes. We further allege the company builds deeply invasive psychological and behavioral profiles on students — profiles that can follow them and potentially harm them.


    I never consented to this. And neither did millions of parents.


    Sending our children to public school is a legal right. We should not have to expose them to commercial data trafficking just to get an education.


    With the average school district using thousands of EdTech tools each year — and each child accessing dozens — the question isn’t whether this is happening. The question is whether parents ever gave meaningful, informed consent.


    Joining me is Andy Liddell, attorney with the EdTech Law Center, to answer the questions flooding in from parents and teachers:

    • What exactly are we alleging?
    • What data is actually being collected?
    • Is academic growth tracking the same as data mining?
    • Can parents opt out?
    • Is this a class action?
    • What can teachers do?
    • And what do we say to critics who claim this is just fear-mongering?


    If you’re a parent, teacher, or school leader, this conversation is one you cannot afford to miss.


    If you’re interested in learning more or potentially joining an EdTech-related lawsuit, visit: edtech.law.


    Because this isn’t just about i-Ready.


    It’s about whether our children’s data belongs to them — or to corporations.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    18 min
  • [THE VERDICT] The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial
    Mar 27 2026
    On March 25, 2026, after eight days of deliberation, the jury reached a verdict in the first bellwether trial against Meta and YouTube.The verdict: The jury ruled in favor of Kaley on all counts. Scroll down to the bottom of this description for the full verdict.This week, we take you inside the final, nerve-wracking days in the hallway and courtroom — the jury questions about expert testimony, deleted accounts, Instagram usage, punitive damages, and the moment they told the judge they were deadlocked with one defendant.We walk through what each question meant, what it revealed about the jury’s thinking, and how both sides responded. You’ll hear what happened in real time as families waited, attorneys speculated, and the stakes became crystal clear.We’re joined by Laura Marquez-Garrett of the Social Media Victims Law Center to break down:What the verdict actually meansWhether an appeal is likelyWhy early bellwether cases often shape — but don’t decide — the larger warWhat happens next in the thousands of cases still moving forwardBecause this was never just about one family.It the most powerful tech companies in the world… versus families. And this verdict is the accelerator of justice.The trials continue. Thousands of families. Dozens of states. School districts. The pressure is building. We’ll continue to be inside the courtroom translating it all for parents everywhere.The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial is an investigative mini-series by Scrolling 2 Death, in partnership with Heat Initiative.Video Editing expertly provided by Jacob Meade.Are you willing to take action against Big Tech? Join us in D.C.! Fill out this form.THE VERDICTMETAWas Meta negligent in the design or operation of Instagram? YESWas Meta’s negligence a substantial factor in causing harm to KGM? YESDid Meta know or should it reasonably have known that the design or operation of Instagram was dangerous or was likely to be dangerous when used by a minor in a reasonably foreseeable manner? YES‍Did Meta know or should it reasonably have known that users would not realize the danger? YESDid Meta fail to adequately warn of the danger? YESWould a reasonable platform designer or operator under the same or similar circumstances have warned of the danger or instructed on the safe use of the platform? YESWas Meta's failure to adequately warn or instruct a substantial factor in causing harm to KGM? YESYOUTUBEWas YouTube negligent in the design or operation of YouTube? YESWas YouTube's negligence a substantial factor in causing harm to KGM? YESDid YouTube know or should it reasonably have known that the design or operation of YouTube was dangerous or was likely to be dangerous when used by a minor in a reasonably foreseeable manner? YES‍Did YouTube know or should it reasonably have known that users would not realize the danger? YESDid YouTube fail to adequately warn of the danger? YESWould a reasonable platform designer or operator under the same or similar circumstances have warned of the danger or instructed on the safe use of the platform? YESWas YouTube's failure to adequately warn or instruct a substantial factor in causing harm to KGM? YES‍THE DAMAGESA. What are KGM's damages? $3,000,000B. What percentage of responsibility for K.G.M.’s harm do you assign to each of the following? 70% Meta30% YouTubeC. Do you find that K.G.M. proved by clear and convincing evidence that Meta acted with malice, oppression, or fraud in conduct upon which you base your finding of liability? YESD. Do you find that K.G.M. proved by clear and convincing evidence that YouTube acted with malice, oppression, or fraud in conduct upon which you base your finding of liability? YESPUNITIVE DAMAGES: $3,000,000 ($2.1M to Meta, $900K to YouTube)
    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    40 min
  • [WEEK 7 RECAP] The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial: Final Witnesses. Closings. Deliberations Begin.
    Mar 15 2026

    This week on The Heat is On…Big Tech on Trial, we reached a turning point.


    After weeks of testimony, we heard from the final witnesses — including Meta’s paid medical expert, internal researchers, and YouTube leadership. New details emerged about deleted watch history data, internal warnings about teen risk, and what company executives knew about under-13 enforcement.


    Then came closing arguments.


    Mark Lanier argued that platform design targeted Kaley from a young age. Attorneys for Meta and YouTube pushed back, claiming there is no proven causal link between social media and mental health struggles, for Kaley or anyone else.


    Friday morning, the jury began deliberating.


    Now nine jurors must decide:

    Were these platforms negligently designed in ways that substantially contributed to Kaley’s anxiety, depression, and suicidal thoughts? Or not?


    We’re inside the courtroom translating what this case means for parents everywhere — because these trials aren't just about one child. It could shape the future of accountability for TikTok, YouTube, Meta, and Snap Inc..


    Verdict watch has begun.


    The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial is an investigative mini-series by Scrolling 2 Death, in partnership with Heat Initiative.


    Video Editing expertly provided by Jacob Meade.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    1 h et 4 min
  • [WEEK 6 RECAP] The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial: A Psychologist, A Whistleblower + Plaintiff Rests Their Case
    Mar 8 2026

    This week inside the courtroom, science took center stage — and the stakes were higher than ever.


    Dr. Kara Bagot, a psychiatrist and neuroscientist who helped develop the NIH’s landmark ABCD brain study, spent five days on the stand. She testified that to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, Kaley developed social media addiction — and that YouTube acted as the “gateway,” beginning at just six years old. She walked the jury through the platform features that fuel compulsive use: infinite scroll, autoplay, algorithms, notifications, likes, filters, Shorts, Reels, and the lack of meaningful age verification.


    Under intense cross-examination from Meta and YouTube’s attorneys, Dr. Bagot held her ground — insisting on context over yes-or-no soundbites. Jurors watched closely. When she was finally excused, there as a quiet applause.


    Then came former Meta safety executive and whistleblower Arturo Bejar. He testified that by 2019, Meta researchers had identified addiction as a serious issue — but leadership discouraged even using the word, replacing it with “problematic use.” He described internal knowledge of harmful design choices, ineffective safety tools, and what he called “dark patterns,” including the infamous “blue button” that discouraged user reporting.


    Arturo also testified that age verification is not technically difficult — and that Meta could remove millions of under-13 users if it chose to.


    Next up was child safety expert and mom, Brooke Istook. Brooke powerfully described the generational tech gap, Instagram's growth team promoting FINSTAs, misleading safety promises, and the no-win position families face trying to supervise platforms designed to outmaneuver them.


    By week’s end, the Plaintiffs rested their case and the Defense began calling witnesses in the form of video depositions.


    Meanwhile, outside this courtroom, the pressure is mounting. Big tech lobbyists have infiltrated important online safety legislation and 33 new families across 19 states have joined the consolidated JCCP litigation, with Roblox newly added to the complaints.


    Thousands of families. Dozens of states. And now jurors — everyday people — watching some of the richest companies in the world fight a single family over what caused a young girl’s harm.


    These are the tobacco trials of our generation.


    We’re inside the courtroom translating it all in real time — joined this week by Christine Almadjian, legislative consultant and courtroom observer, and Lennon Torres of Heat Initiative — bringing you the moments that mattered, the legal context behind the strategy, and what it means for families everywhere.


    Because this fight isn’t abstract.

    It’s about the apps in our kids’ pockets.
    It’s about truth, justice and accountability.
    And it’s about whether these companies will finally be forced to change.


    We stand with families.


    The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial is an investigative mini-series by Scrolling 2 Death, in partnership with Heat Initiative.


    Video Editing expertly provided by Jacob Meade.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    1 h et 12 min
  • [BONUS EPISODE] The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial: Meta Whistleblower Brian Boland
    Mar 5 2026

    What really happens inside one of the most powerful companies in the world?


    This week, we sit down with Brian Boland, a former senior leader at Facebook (pre-Meta), who spent more than a decade helping build and scale Facebook and Instagram's advertising systems — and later testified in court about what he saw.


    Brian was in the courtroom for nearly five hours. In this candid conversation, he pulls back the curtain on:

    • What it feels like to testify under oath against your former company
    • How Meta’s internal culture shifted after whistleblowers like Frances Haugen spoke out
    • The reality of Mark Zuckerberg’s power inside the company — and why the board can’t remove him
    • How algorithms are built, tested, and optimized — and why even engineers don’t fully understand their long-term impacts
    • Whether Meta is truly incentivized to limit teen usage
    • The truth about ad revenue from minors
    • How accurate age-estimation technology really is — and why that matters
    • What whistleblowing actually costs the people who do it


    Brian doesn’t call for the end of social media. In fact, he believes these platforms could be built to strengthen communities. But he’s clear: the current incentives — profit, growth, daily active users — drive decisions that put engagement above safety.


    He also shares what he told executives, including Mark Zuckerberg, before he left — and the response he received.


    If you’ve ever wondered:

    • Are these platforms intentionally habit-forming?
    • Do they really know how young users are?
    • Could they reduce harm if they wanted to?
    • Why don’t more insiders speak out?


    This episode is essential listening.


    It’s a rare, inside look at how power, profit, algorithms, and accountability collide — and what it might actually take to force change.


    The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial is an investigative mini-series by Scrolling 2 Death, in partnership with Heat Initiative.


    Video Editing expertly provided by Jacob Meade.


    Research mentioned in the episode: Social media platforms generate billions of dollars in revenue from U.S. youth: Findings from a simulated revenue model (Raffoul article)

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    50 min
  • [WEEK 5 RECAP] The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial: Kaley Takes the Stand
    Mar 1 2026

    This week, we’re joined by Meta whistleblower Brian Boland, who appeared as a witness in this trial, and law student Christine Almadjian, who has spent hours inside the courtroom watching this case unfold. Christine is also a legislative consultant with END OSEAC.


    Thousands of families, school districts, and dozens of states have filed consolidated lawsuits against TikTok, YouTube, Meta, and Snap Inc., alleging their platforms were deliberately designed to addict and harm children. Some are calling this “the tobacco trial of our generation.”


    The first case centers on Kaley — a child like yours and mine — facing the most powerful companies in the world.


    This week, YouTube’s VP of Engineering defended the algorithm as internal documents revealed research linking excessive use to addiction, sleep disruption, anxiety, depression, and body image issues — along with features like autoplay designed to increase watch time. We heard testimony that kids using YouTube while logged out are treated like adults, with no safety features enabled.


    A data expert challenged Meta and YouTube’s reported ad revenue from minors, citing “significant errors and contradictions,” followed by testimony from Kaley's therapist.


    Then Kaley took the stand.


    She described creating multiple accounts to like her own videos and posts, sneaking her phone at night, spending up to 16 hours a day on Instagram, feeling panic without her device — and still, at 20 years old, struggling to stop. When asked whether she had addiction, anxiety, depression, or body dysmorphia before social media, her answer was simple: no.


    Meta and YouTube pushed back hard, pointing to family conflict and school bullying. In just a few weeks, the jury will decide if social media was a subsantial factor in her mental heath struggles.


    This case isn’t just about one family. It’s about millions of kids — and what happens next affects all of us.


    The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial is an investigative mini-series by Scrolling 2 Death, in partnership with Heat Initiative.


    Video Editing expertly provided by Jacob Meade.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    1 h et 3 min
  • [WEEK 4 RECAP] The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial: Zuckerberg. A Whistleblower. The Trial Ignites.
    Feb 21 2026

    This week on The Heat is On…Big Tech on Trial, the spotlight was on Mark Zuckerberg — but it didn’t stay there for long.


    Nicki Petrossi and Sarah Gardner take you inside a dramatic week in court as Zuckerberg faced questioning about youth safety, platform design, and internal company practices — followed by testimony from a former insider whose statements directly conflicted with his.


    In this episode:

    • The most revealing exchanges from Zuckerberg’s time on the stand
    • The key claims he made — and what evidence challenged them
    • A whistleblower’s testimony that told a very different story about how platforms operate
    • Emotional reactions from parents watching it unfold in real time
    • Why legal observers say this week could shift momentum in the trial
    • A new Annual Report by Bark connecting Kaley's harm to children today


    Millions are watching because what happens here will reshape accountability for the most powerful tech companies in the world.

    This isn’t just a trial. It’s a turning point.


    Thank you to our special guest, Titania Jordan of Bark Technologies. Here's their 2025 Annual Report, referenced in the episode.


    The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial is an investigative mini-series by Scrolling 2 Death, in partnership with Heat Initiative.


    Video Editing expertly provided by Jacob Meade.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    1 h
  • [WEEK 3 RECAP] The Heat is On...Big Tech on Trial: Opening Statements. First Witnesses.
    Feb 14 2026

    Week 3 marks a turning point inside the courtroom: opening statements begin, the first witnesses take the stand, and the stakes become unmistakably real. Hosts Nicki Petrossi and Sarah Gardner (of Heat Initiative) bring you inside the proceedings as plaintiffs and defense lay out competing narratives about what happened to Kaley—and what responsibility tech giants bear.


    Plaintiff attorney Mark Lanier delivers what attendees call a “masterclass” opening, previewing internal records from YouTube and Meta suggesting early-age targeting and engineering for addiction. Defense attorney Paul Schmidt counters with a starkly different claim: that social platforms can benefit vulnerable teens and that responsibility lies elsewhere - on parents. YouTube counsel Louis Lee insists repeatedly: YouTube is not social media.


    The first expert witness, addiction psychiatrist Dr. Anna Lembke of Stanford University, author of Dopamine Nation, walks jurors through the neuroscience of compulsive use—arguing that platform design features can function like addictive stimuli, especially for adolescents. Cross-examinations grow tense as attorneys challenge her comparisons and conclusions.


    Midweek brings the highly anticipated testimony of Adam Mosseri, head of Instagram, questioned about past statements on social media addiction, teen safety, and whether growth incentives conflict with child protection. Outside the courthouse, grieving parents—including featured guest John DeMay—camp overnight for seats, hold direct actions targeting Snapchat, and remind the world what this trial is really about: children.


    You’ll hear:

    • Real-time courthouse reflections
    • Parent voices from the steps outside
    • Key courtroom exchanges that could shape the verdict
    • Legal context explaining what jurors must decide


    Next week’s witnesses raise the stakes even higher, with expected testimony from Mark Zuckerberg and Neal Mohan.


    Because this isn’t just a trial. It’s a reckoning. And we’re translating every moment that matters for families everywhere.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    57 min