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Family of B.C. teen who died after being sextorted joins lawsuit against social media giants | CBC News

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WARNING: This story contains discussion of suicide and sexual extortion.

When B.C. teenager Amanda Todd sat in front of her computer and detailed the relentless bullying and extortion she’d faced on social media, it sent a shock wave to parents around the world. Now twelve years later, her family is joining others in a lawsuit alleging those dangers persist for kids online.

Only a few weeks after posting the viral video, 15-year-old Todd died by suicide in October 2012.

“Why isn’t life safer for kids?” her mother Carol Todd asked, in an interview from Port Coquitlam. “Why are there more kids being harmed?”

The lawsuit was filed in the Los Angeles County Superior Court earlier this month on behalf of 11 families — two of whom are Canadian — who say their children suffered physical and mental harms because of social media platforms.

It alleges that some of the world’s largest technology companies knowingly designed and marketed defective products to kids in order to boost engagement numbers. 

Some kids took their lives after they were targeted by strangers in sextortion, where a person threatens to expose sexually compromising information or images. Others developed eating disorders or depression and had to be hospitalized.

Amanda Todd took her own life on Oct. 10, 2012, after posting a video on YouTube saying she had been blackmailed by an online predator. (Telus Originals)

The lawsuit names tech juggernauts Meta — the parent company of Facebook and Instagram — Snapchat, TikTok’s parent company ByteDance, Discord and Google, which owns YouTube.

“What happened to these children was neither an accident nor a coincidence. It was a foreseeable result of deliberate design decisions that they make to maximize engagement over safety,” said Matthew Bergman, the founding attorney of the Social Media Victims Law Center, which is handling the case.

“They make money by selling advertising to kids and selling kids’ data.”

A young girl holds a cellphone in her hands as she puts her head into her knees.
The lawsuit claims that social media giants are prioritizing engagement over children’s safety. (Antonio Guillem/Shutterstock)

Google said the allegations are not true. Spokesperson José Castañeda said Google built services and policies in conjunction with experts to provide age-appropriate experiences and parental controls.

The other companies did not provide comment. Their websites generally say they have age limits and prohibit content that causes harm. TikTok’s website says it moderates content “that involves goods or activities that may be risky, addictive, dangerous, fraudulent, or otherwise require a higher degree of care.”

A mounting number of lawsuits have been brought against tech giants alleging children are being harmed by social media exposure.

WATCH |  Parent of P.E.I. sextortion victim demands action: 

Social media companies must do more to protect teens from sextortion, P.E.I. father demands

Carl Burke says social media companies like Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and TikTok need to do much more to protect teenagers from sextortion. Burke’s son was a victim of sextortion, and died by suicide in 2023. Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, recently announced new measures to protect users from sextortion, but Burke says they don’t go far enough to keep children safe.

Blackmail leads to suicides

The latest lawsuit points to internal documents and research, including from the Facebook Papers, which were released by a whistleblower. It quotes Meta documents that read, “the young ones are the best ones. You want to bring people to your service young and early.”

Todd began using Facebook in 2008. The platform was new and her mother, like most people, thought it was designed to be fun and safe. Todd soon became trapped in years of extortion.

Aydin Coban, who is Dutch, started blackmailing Todd with a photo taken when she’d lifted up her shirt in a chat. His Canadian criminal trial heard that Coban used 22 online aliases to harass Todd over two years, starting when she was 12 years old.

Social media apps are shown on a phone
Snapchat, Instagram and Facebook are named in the complaint. (Reuters)

Coban was convicted of harassment and extortion in Canada. He was also convicted in the Netherlands on similar charges involving the online extortion of 33 young girls and gay men.

The lawsuit alleges there were several steps Meta could have taken to make its product safer for minors and could prevent strangers from reaching out to children.

The lawsuit includes the family of another Canadian teenager who died more than a decade after Todd’s case captured headlines across the country.

Carl Burke and Barbie Lavers hold up a photo of Harry Burke.
Harry Burke — whose parents are pictured here earlier this year — died just hours after making contact on Snapchat with someone he thought was a girl but who turned out to be an extortionist. (Laura Meader/CBC)

Harry Burke went to his father for help after the 17-year-old Prince Edward Island youth sent an explicit photo on Snapchat and was sextorted for money. 

The lawsuit says his parents planned to go to RCMP in the morning but, that night, Burke died by suicide

The lawsuit also represents American parents who say their children became depressed and suicidal because of the social media platforms. 

U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said earlier this year that the mental health crisis among young people is an emergency “and social media has emerged as an important contributor,” calling for a tobacco-style warning label on the platforms.

Bergman, the lawyer leading the case, said the lawsuit argues that “these are dangerous products … and foreseeably cause harm to kids.”

They are designed to get increased engagement from youth by showing more extreme material while encouraging them to interact more with the platform, Bergman said, and it leads to addiction and psychological damage.

An up-close image of two icons of Facebook and Instagram.
The lawyers in the case argue that social media leads to addiction and psychological problems. (Reuters)

Governments forming legislation

The concern around social media safety has prompted a response from lawmakers on both sides of the border.

Canada’s Liberal government has been trying to pass an online harms bill. It has faced criticism, including from the Opposition Conservatives, who say it will create a new bureaucracy.

The U.S. is also moving ahead on its own Kids Online Safety Act to create a “duty of care,” a legal term that requires companies to take reasonable steps to prevent harm. That bill passed in the Senate, but it’s less certain what will happen in the House. 

WATCH | Carol Todd speaks about online harms bill: 

Amanda Todd’s mother says new online harms bill ‘could have saved her life’ | Canada Tonight

The Online Harms Act, tabled Monday by the Liberal government, proposes changes to the Criminal Code and new regulatory bodies to protect children and adults from abuse online. Carol Todd, the mother of Amanda Todd, a B.C. teen who died by suicide after being sexually extorted, says if this legislation had been in place when her daughter was alive, ‘it could have saved her life.’

Carol Todd encouraged parents to connect with resources like the Canadian Centre for Child Protection and to make sure their kids know they can talk to an adult if something happens. 

She said it was important to join other families in the lawsuit to make social media safer for children.

“I can’t bring my child back … it’s to keep other kids safe.”


Support is available for anyone who has been sexually assaulted. You can access crisis lines and local support services through this Government of Canada website or the Ending Violence Association of Canada database. ​​If you’re in immediate danger or fear for your safety or that of others around you, please call 911. 

If you or someone you know is struggling, here’s where to get help:

This guide from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health outlines how to talk about suicide with someone you’re worried about.

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