Meta Pulls Addiction Lawsuit Ads from Facebook and Instagram


TL;DR

  • Ad Removal: Meta pulled over a dozen attorney ads recruiting plaintiffs for social media addiction lawsuits on April 9.
  • Legal Context: A California jury awarded $6 million in damages after finding Meta negligent in a child addiction case.
  • Conflict of Interest: The move raises questions about whether Meta can suppress lawful ads to limit its own litigation exposure.
  • Section 230 Risk: Legal experts warn that selective ad removal could undermine Meta’s Section 230 defense in pending lawsuits.

Meta is pulling attorney recruitment ads from Facebook, Instagram, Threads, and Messenger that seek plaintiffs for social media addiction lawsuits against the company. The removal, first reported by Axios, comes two weeks after a California jury found Meta negligent in a landmark child addiction case, awarding $6 million in damages.

Blocking these ads lets Meta wield its dual role as advertising gatekeeper and litigation defendant: the company controlling the world’s two largest social media apps is now deciding which lawsuits against it can be advertised on those same apps. With more than 10,000 individual lawsuits and 800 school district claims filed nationwide, according to court records, the action raises immediate questions about whether a company can use its own platform to suppress lawful advertising that threatens its legal position – a move critics say could paradoxically strengthen the case against it.

Meta’s Ad Removal and Its Justification

According to Axios, over a dozen addiction lawsuit ads were deactivated on April 9, including ads from large national firms Morgan & Morgan and Sokolove Law. The ads ran across Facebook, Instagram, Threads, and Messenger, as well as Meta’s Audience Network, which distributes ads to thousands of third-party sites. A few ads remained active after the sweep, including some posted earlier that day.

It is unclear whether any of the plaintiff-seeking law firms are backed by private equity, as the original California lawsuit appears to have been. Meta appears to be relying on a terms-of-service clause allowing it to remove content deemed necessary to avoid or mitigate misuse of its services or adverse legal or regulatory impacts. No similar restriction appears in Meta’s advertising standards, though those standards include a separate clause reserving the right to reject ads contrary to the company’s interests, including its “competitive position” and “advertising philosophy.”

“We’re actively defending ourselves against these lawsuits and are removing ads that attempt to recruit plaintiffs for them. We will not allow trial lawyers to profit from our platforms while simultaneously claiming they are harmful.”

Meta spokesperson (via Axios)

Meta frames the removal as defensive litigation strategy, but it also demonstrates the company exercising editorial judgment over which ads can run on its platforms. Attorney recruitment advertisements are legal in all 50 states, and Meta’s own advertising standards contain no explicit prohibition against them. As both the advertising platform and the defendant in these lawsuits, Meta’s decision to suppress legal advertising creates a conflict of interest – and the kind of curatorial decision-making that courts examine when assessing Section 230 protections. Traditional media companies have long accepted attorney recruitment advertising without regard to whether the advertised lawsuits target their own interests.