Meta Platforms is heading into one of the most consequential courtroom battles in its history, as a New Mexico trial beginning Monday could result in sweeping court-ordered changes to how Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp operate for young users.
The company has warned it may ultimately withdraw its services from the state if the proposed remedies are imposed.
The case, filed by New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez, represents a major escalation in the legal campaign against social media companies. Unlike earlier lawsuits centered primarily on financial penalties or consumer disclosures, New Mexico is attempting to use public nuisance law to directly force structural redesigns of Meta’s platforms.
Legal analysts say the outcome could become a template for similar actions nationwide, potentially opening a new front in the battle over child safety, platform accountability, and the role of algorithms in shaping adolescent behavior.
At the center of the case is a question with potentially enormous implications for the technology industry: whether the design of social media platforms themselves can legally constitute a “public nuisance” under state law.
If Judge Bryan Biedscheid agrees with New Mexico’s argument, the ruling could give courts broad authority to mandate operational changes across digital platforms in the same way public nuisance laws were previously used against tobacco companies, opioid manufacturers, and vaping firms.
The trial follows an earlier jury verdict in March that found Meta violated New Mexico’s consumer protection laws by misleading users about the safety of Facebook and Instagram for minors. The jury ordered the company to pay $375 million in damages.
Now the state is seeking far more sweeping penalties and remedies.
“It will be an opportunity for us to explore more deeply the size and scale and effectively the monetary value of the public nuisance harm that was a product of this business’s behavior for the last, you know, 10 or 15 years,” Torrez told reporters ahead of the trial.
According to court filings, New Mexico plans to seek billions of dollars more in damages, including roughly $3.7 billion to fund a 15-year statewide mental-health initiative involving healthcare facilities and expanded youth services.
But the more significant threat to Meta may be the operational restrictions the state wants imposed.
New Mexico is asking the court to require Meta to verify users’ ages, redesign recommendation algorithms for minors, disable autoplay features, and eliminate infinite scrolling for younger users. The state argues those features were intentionally engineered to maximize engagement among adolescents while increasing compulsive usage patterns.
The case strikes at the core of Meta’s business model, which relies heavily on engagement-driven advertising systems powered by recommendation algorithms and behavioral targeting.
Meta argues the demands are technologically unworkable and legally dangerous.
“The New Mexico Attorney General’s focus on a single platform is a misguided strategy that ignores the hundreds of other apps teens use daily,” a Meta spokesperson said. “Rather than providing comprehensive protections, the state’s proposed mandates infringe on parental rights and stifle free expression for all New Mexicans.”
The company also warned in court filings that compliance with some of the proposed mandates may be impossible, potentially forcing Meta to suspend operations in the state altogether.
That threat underscores what is at stake not only for Meta but for the broader technology sector.
The New Mexico case is emerging at a time of intensifying global scrutiny of social media platforms, particularly around child safety and mental health. Governments in the United States and Europe are increasingly moving beyond voluntary industry standards toward direct regulatory intervention.
Meta itself acknowledged the mounting pressure last week, warning investors that legal and regulatory actions in the U.S. and European Union “could significantly impact our business and financial results.”
More than 40 U.S. states and over 1,300 school districts have already filed similar lawsuits against social media companies, many invoking public nuisance theories in an effort to secure court-ordered reforms rather than simple financial settlements.
Legal scholars say the strategy mirrors earlier litigation campaigns against tobacco and opioid companies, where states sought to frame widespread public-health harms as systemic corporate conduct rather than isolated consumer disputes.
Adam Zimmerman, a professor at USC Gould School of Law, noted that public nuisance claims historically targeted activities such as polluting waterways or obstructing public roads, but over recent decades have expanded into broader public-health litigation involving industries accused of causing societal harm.
For Meta, the risk extends beyond financial exposure. A ruling in favor of New Mexico could create a precedent allowing state courts to directly influence platform architecture, recommendation systems, and engagement mechanics. That could fundamentally alter how social media companies design products for minors and potentially weaken advertising-driven growth models built around user attention.
Meta has strongly disputed the scientific basis of the allegations, arguing there is “no scientific evidence” proving social media causes mental-health disorders. The company also contends that responsibility for youth online behavior cannot be placed solely on one platform when teenagers use hundreds of digital services daily.
Still, the political environment has shifted sharply against major social media companies. Bipartisan criticism has intensified in recent years following internal disclosures, congressional hearings, and mounting public concern over anxiety, depression, self-harm, and addictive online behavior among teenagers.
The New Mexico trial could now become one of the first major tests of whether courts are prepared to move from criticizing social media companies to actively redesigning how they operate.






