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The parents of four British teenagers have filed a lawsuit against TikTok and its parent company, ByteDance, claiming their children's deaths resulted from the social media platform's viral "blackout challenge." The wrongful death lawsuit was initiated by the Social Media Victims Law Center on behalf of the families after the children—Isaac Kenevan (13), Archie Battersbee (12), Julian "Jools" Sweeney (14), and Maia Walsh (13)—allegedly attempted the dangerous challenge in 2022.
Matthew Bergman, founding attorney of the center, asserted that TikTok's algorithm deliberately targeted children with harmful content in pursuit of increased engagement and revenue. Although TikTok stated that related hashtags have been blocked since 2020 and that they prohibit dangerous content, the lawsuit claims that the platform perpetuates a false sense of security for parents while promoting risky challenges.
Additionally, the lawsuit emphasizes that the children involved were well-behaved and had no prior mental health issues. The case arrives amid ongoing discussions in the UK regarding new regulations to protect children from harmful online content.