<https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2024/nov/04/french-families-sue-tiktok-exposure-harmful-content-suicide-self-harm-eating-disorders>


Seven French families have filed a lawsuit against TikTok, accusing the 
platform of exposing their adolescent children to harmful content that led to 
two of them taking their own lives at 15, their lawyer said.

The lawsuit alleges TikTok’s algorithm exposed the seven teenagers to videos 
promoting suicide, self-harm and eating disorders, lawyer Laure Boutron-Marmion 
told broadcaster Franceinfo on Monday.

The families are taking joint legal action in the Créteil judicial court in 
Paris. Boutron-Marmion said it was the first such grouped case in Europe.

“The parents want TikTok’s legal liability to be recognised in court,” she 
said, adding: “This is a commercial company offering a product to consumers who 
are, in addition, minors. They must, therefore, answer for the product’s 
shortcomings.”

TikTok, like other social media platforms, has long faced scrutiny over the 
policing of content on its app.

As with Meta’s Facebook and Instagram, it faces hundreds of lawsuits in the US 
accusing it of enticing and addicting millions of children to its platform, 
damaging their mental health.

Last month, more than a dozen states and the District of Columbia filed 
lawsuits against the Chinese-owned company, alleging it is damaging children’s 
mental health with a product designed to be used compulsively and excessively.

Responding to the lawsuits, a TikTok spokesperson said: “We strongly disagree 
with these claims, many of which we believe to be inaccurate and misleading.”

TikTok has been approached for comment about the French lawsuit.

The company has said previously it took issues that were linked to children’s 
mental health seriously.

Its chief executive, Shou Zi Chew, this year told US lawmakers the company had 
invested in measures to protect young people who use the app.

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