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Social Media

'Subway Surfing' Death Suit Against TikTok, Meta Further Chips Away at Section 230

Norma Nazario blames her son's death on social media algorithms.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 7.21.2025 11:30 AM

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Person holding a smart phone with a TikTok app on screen | Beata Zawrzel/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(Beata Zawrzel/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

"This case illustrates how the Section 230 precedent is fading, as courts keep chipping away at its edges to reach counterintuitive conclusions that should be clearly covered by Section 230," writes law professor and First Amendment expert Eric Goldman on his Technology and Marketing Law Blog.

The case in question—Nazario v. Bytedance Ltd.—involves a tragedy turned into a cudgel against tech companies and free speech.

It was brought by Norma Nazario, a woman whose son died while "subway surfing"—that is, climbing on top of a moving subway train. She argues that her son, 15-year-old Zackery, and his girlfriend only did such a reckless thing because the boy "had
become addicted to" TikTok and Instagram and these apps had encouraged him to hop atop a subway car by showing him subway surfing videos.

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Nazario is suing TikTok, its parent company (Bytedance), Instagram parent-company Meta, the Metropolitan Transit Authority, and the New York City Transit Authority, in a New York state court, with claims ranging from product liability and negligence to intentional infliction of emotional distress, unjust enrichment, and wrongful death. The social media defendants filed a motion to dismiss the case, which the court recently granted in part and rejected in part.

Looking for Someone To Blame

Cases like these are now, sadly, common, and always somewhat difficult to discuss. I feel deep sympathy for Nazario and any parent who loses a child. And it's understandable that such parents might be eager for someone to blame.

But teenagers doing dangerous, reckless things is not some new and internet-created phenomenon. And the fact that a particular dangerous or reckless thing might be showcased on social media platforms doesn't mean social media platforms caused or should be held liable for their death. We don't blame bookstores, or movie theaters, or streaming platforms if someone dies doing something they read about in a book or witnessed in a movie or TV show.

Alas, the involvement of tech companies and social media often overrides people's normal sense of how things should work.

We can generally recognize that if someone harms themselves doing a dangerous stunt they saw in a movie, the movie theater or streaming service where they saw that movie should not be punished, even if it promoted the movie to the person harmed. But throw around words like "algorithms" and some people—even judges—will act as if this changes everything.

Enter Section 230

Typically, online platforms—including TikTok and Instagram—are protected from much liability for content created by their users.

Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act says that interactive computer services and their users are legally responsible for their own speech, in the form of content that they create in whole or part, but not responsible for the speech of third parties. Sounds simple, right?

But trying to define—and whittle away at—this simple distinction has become a hallmark of lawsuits and legislation aimed at technology companies. Lawyers, activists, and the people they represent are constantly arguing that even when tech companies do not create offending or dangerous content, they are exempt from Section 230 protection for some reason involving product design or functionality or engaging in traditional editorial functions (such as content moderation).

The social media companies in this case argue that they are indeed protected by Section 230, since the subway surfing content viewed by Zackery Nazario was not created by TikTok or Meta but by third-party users of these platforms.

Nazario's suit, in turn, argues that Section 230 doesn't matter or doesn't apply here because this is not about TikTok's and Meta's roles as platforms for third-party speech. It's about their role as product manufacturers who have designed an unsafe product and used "algorithms [which] directed [Zackery]—unsolicited—to increasingly extreme and dangerous content."

Nazario's suit also argues that the tech platforms are co-creators of the subway surfing videos her son watched, since they provided users with tools to edit or modify their videos. And, as co-creators, they would not be protected by Section 230.

TikTok, Instagram Not Co-Creators, But…

The court did not entirely buy Nazario's arguments. It rejected the idea that TikTok and Instagram are co-creators of subway surfing videos just because they "make features available to users to personalize their content and make it more engaging."

It is TikTok and Instagram users, not the companies, that select "what features to add to their posts, if any" and "the social media defendants did not make any editorial decisions in the subway surfing content; the user, alone, personalizes their own posts," the court held. "Therefore, the social media defendants have not 'materially contributed' to the development of the content such that they may be considered co-creators."

So far, so good.

But the court was sympathetic to Nazario's argument that using algorithms changes things, despite "extensive precedent rejecting this workaround," as Goldman put it.

Here's what the court said:

Plaintiff's claims, therefore, are not based on the social media defendants' mere display of popular or user-solicited third-party content, but on their alleged active choice to inundate Zackery with content he did not seek involving dangerous "challenges." Plaintiff alleges that this content was purposefully fed to Zackery because of his age, as such content is popular with younger audiences and keeps them on the social media defendants' applications for longer, and not because of any user inputs that indicated he was interested in seeing such content. Thus, based on the allegations in the complaint, which must be accepted as true on a motion to dismiss, it is plausible that the social media defendants' role exceeded that of neutral assistance in promoting content, and constituted active identification of users who would be most impacted by the content.

Losing the Plot?

It's important to note the court is not agreeing with Nazario's assertion that Meta and TikTok actively push dangerous content to teens to keep them on their platforms longer, nor that it pushed this content to Zackery without any "inputs that indicated he was interested in seeing such content." But at this stage in the proceedings, the court isn't being asked to determine the merit of such a claim, merely whether it's possible. If so, could render a Section 230 defense moot, the court suggests.

But "the court has lost the jurisprudential plot here," writes Goldman:

So long as the content is third-party content, it doesn't matter whether the service "passively" displayed it or "actively" highlighted it–either choice is an editorial decision fully protected by Section 230. Thus, the court's purported distinction between 'neutral assistance' and 'active identification' is a false dichotomy. All content prioritization is, by design, intended to help content reach the audience that is most interested in it. That is the irreducible nature of editorial discretion, and no amount of synonym-substitution masks that fact.

To get around this, the court restyles the argument as being about product design and failure to warn: "plaintiff asserts that the social media defendants should not be permitted to actively target young users of its applications with dangerous 'challenges' before the user gives any indication that they are specifically interested in such content and without warning." As always, I ask: what is the product, and warn about what? If the answer to both questions is "third-party content," Section 230 should apply.

The court could still decide that Section 230 applies. But it is first seeking "discovery to illuminate how Zackery was directed to the subway surfing content."

Avoiding this kind of invasive and extensive process is one of the reasons Section 230 is so important. After all, much of the content protected by Section 230 is also protected by the First Amendment. But Section 230 gives courts—and defendants—a shortcut, so they're not stuck arguing each case on protracted First Amendment grounds.

Unfortunately, defendants have been seeing some success in getting around Section 230 with nods to product design and algorithms.

"If plaintiffs can survive motions to dismiss just by picking the right words, then Section 230 already loses much of its value," suggests Goldman. "These pleadaround techniques especially seem to work in state trial courts, who are used to giving plaintiffs the benefit of discovery."


More Sex & Tech News

Abortion pill bans get the OK: Yes, states can ban abortion pills, a federal appeals court has ruled. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's approval of the abortion pill mifepristone doesn't preempt state ban, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit held in a July 15 ruling. The case concerned West Virginia's abortion ban, which makes abortion illegal at all stages of pregnancy and in almost all circumstances. The law—enacted in September 2022—means abortion undertaken with a pill (known as medication abortion) is as illegal as surgical abortion. "The question before us is whether certain federal standards regulating the distribution of the abortion drug mifepristone preempt the West Virginia law as it applies to medication abortions," wrote Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III in the court's opinion. "The district court determined there was no preemption, and we now do the same."

Adult game crackdown on Steam: "Valve's famously permissive rules for what games are and are not allowed on Steam got a little less permissive this week, seemingly in response to outside pressure" from payment processors and banks, reports Ars Technica. New content guidelines suggest that "certain kinds of adult only content" are prohibited if they "may violate the rules and standards set forth by Steam's payment processors and related card networks and banks, or Internet network providers." The new rules come on the heels of the company removing "dozens of Steam games whose titles make reference to incest, along with a handful of sex games referencing 'slave' or 'prison' imagery," notes Ars Technica. (For more on how payment processors and credit card companies have been driving crackdowns on adult content online, check out my May 2022 Reason cover story "The New Campaign for a Sex-Free Internet.")

White House to target "woke AI"? Missouri's Republican attorney general isn't the only one intent on targeting artificial intelligence that doesn't conform to a conservative worldview. "White House officials are preparing an executive order targeting tech companies with what they see as 'woke' artificial-intelligence models," The Wall Street Journal reports.

Trapped in AI's uncanny valley: Creative writing professor Meghan O'Rourke has penned an interesting examination of her love affair and then disillusionment with using ChatGPT and other generative AI. "A month in, I noticed a strange emotional charge from interacting daily with a system that seemed to be designed to affirm me," O'Rourke writes:  

In talking to me about poetry, ChatGPT adopted a tone I found oddly soothing. When I asked what was making me feel that way, it explained that it was mirroring me: my syntax, my vocabulary, even the "interior weather" of my poems. ("Interior weather" is a phrase I use a lot.) It was producing a fun-house double of me — a performance of human inquiry. I was soothed because I was talking to myself — only it was a version of myself that experienced no anxiety, pressure or self-doubt. The crisis this produces is hard to name, but it was unnerving.

[…] At some point, knowing that the tool was there began to interfere with my own thinking. If I asked it to research contemporary poetry for a class, it offered to write a syllabus. ("What's your vibe — are you hoping for a semester-long syllabus or just new poets to discover for yourself?") If I said yes — to see what it would come up with — the result was different from what I'd do, yet its version lodged unhelpfully in my mind. What happens when technology makes that process all too available?

"Obscene" books bill vetoed: New Hampshire Gov. Kelly Ayotte (R) has vetoed House Bill 324, which would have made it easier for parents to get books and other materials removed from schools because of "nudity, sexual conduct, sexual excitement, or sadomasochistic abuse." Ayotte also vetoed a measure that would have required sex-education courses to show "a high quality computer generated animation or ultrasound video that shows the development of the heart, brain, and other vital organs in early fetal development."

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NEXT: Trump, Who Wants To 'Straighten Out the Press,' Sues The Wall Street Journal Over 'Fake' Epstein Letter

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

Social MediaSection 230AlgorithmsFree SpeechFirst AmendmentTikTokCourtsTechnologyChildrenTeenagersLawsuits
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  1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   9 hours ago

    She argues that her son, 15-year-old Zackery, and his girlfriend only did such a reckless thing because the boy "had
    become addicted to" TikTok and Instagram and these apps had encouraged him to hop atop a subway car by showing him subway surfing videos.

    She is wrong. He did it because he is stupid.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Longtobefree   9 hours ago

      The mother should be arrested for allowing her son to get addicted.

      Log in to Reply
    2. Liberty_Belle   8 hours ago

      It didn't occur to her to remove / parental control TikTok before her kid won the Darwin award ?

      Log in to Reply
  2. Use the Schwartz   9 hours ago

    Sue: She's not nuts. People go to ChatGPT to talk about their problems. She just needed to unload them. You know, bring them out in the open.

    Crocodile Dundee: Hasn't she got any mates?

    Log in to Reply
  3. Michael Ejercito   9 hours ago

    This is exacrlty like arguing that promoting Badthink®™ caused the iNsUrReCtIoN®™!

    Log in to Reply
  4. creech   9 hours ago

    Does this work both ways? If I listen to Maria Bartiromo and score a huge gain in the stock market on some advice I heard on her show, am I obligated to share my winnings with her?

    Log in to Reply
    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   9 hours ago

      Pro tip: you will never score a huge gain from her advice.

      Log in to Reply
    2. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   7 hours ago

      Nobody believes you own stocks.

      Log in to Reply
      1. creech   6 hours ago

        You are free to believe whatever you want.

        Log in to Reply
  5. Eeyore   9 hours ago

    Could it be considered Nazario's fault for failing to trans her kid? Removing your son's testicles significantly reduces this kind of dangerous behavior.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   9 hours ago

      Having an abortion would have prevented this tragedy.

      Log in to Reply
  6. Chumby   9 hours ago

    Did an illegal alien stick his cock in the mouth of the deceased?

    Log in to Reply
  7. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   9 hours ago

    The kid wasn’t properly trained.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Chumby   7 hours ago

      Was on the wrong track.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   4 hours ago

        Too bad there wasn’t subway to fix this.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Chumby   4 hours ago

          Hopefully they’ll be able to engineer something.

          Log in to Reply
  8. BYODB   9 hours ago

    If the first amendment to the constitution doesn't protect 'free speech' than section 230 obviously won't either.

    It's unclear why any idiot thinks otherwise.

    If online platforms want to stop moderating their platforms and promoting news items they can stop worrying about being considered a publication.

    Log in to Reply
  9. TrickyVic (old school)   8 hours ago

    Before the internet it was society's fault.

    Log in to Reply
    1. tracerv   8 hours ago

      https://youtu.be/m3b5Q7b8YXo?si=k2v5AvBdaVaS4x5E

      Death of Duke - Repo Man

      Log in to Reply
      1. TrickyVic (old school)   8 hours ago

        Classic.

        Log in to Reply
  10. Krayt   8 hours ago

    "certain kinds of adult only content" are prohibited if they "may violate the rules and standards set forth by Steam's payment processors and related card networks and banks, or Internet network providers."

    Once again, I call for Congress to require all legal transactions to be permitted, as the cost of making the market in funds transfers. I have no problem with private roads, but if they start restricting particular people, that becomes a problem. No land locking people.

    Moving money from cash to modern electronic convenience should not mean giving up on cash utility by having anyone as permitting gatekeepers.

    I wonder if this will happen, though, given arm twisting by banking is viewed positively by politicians who could never get away with it constitutionally. Witness the Thug of New York, who tried to get banks to cut off gun companies by suggesting banks were suffering "reputational damage", and, wink, may not be eligible for state work anymore.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Krayt   8 hours ago

      "This note is legal tender for all debts, public and private."

      It would be one of the true, proper uses of the commerce clause. And that's a lazy argument. Go straight up power to coin money.

      Log in to Reply
      1. BYODB   8 hours ago

        Try paying rent in cash and see where that gets you.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Vernon Depner   8 hours ago

          If refused, it would get you free rent. The landlord would have no legal recourse if he refused cash.

          Log in to Reply
          1. Mataratones   6 hours ago

            Not true. I don't understand the logic, but just because bills say "legal tender for all debts" doesn't mean people have to accept cash.

            Log in to Reply
            1. Vernon Depner   6 hours ago

              It means that if they don't accept cash, they can't sue you for not paying.

              Log in to Reply
  11. mad.casual   8 hours ago

    Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act says that interactive computer services and their users are legally responsible for their own speech, in the form of content that they create in whole or part, but not responsible for the speech of third parties. Sounds simple, right?

    Fucking LOL.

    First, by your own words Computer Service providers are, *in whole or in part*, liable. This would be degenerate with the classic understanding of the 1A and the case law cited as being inconsistent and requiring S230 to rectify it.

    Second, the law is titled "Protection for private blocking and screening of offensive material" it's not delineating who *is* liable, it's delineating who is being protected.

    Lastly, do you not understand the law and this magazine's (as well as your) own narrative, is this a "We have always been at war with Eastasia." memory hole/retcon, or are you (and the Technology and Marketing Law Blog, in whole or in part) a retarded fucking clown show?

    Log in to Reply
  12. Bertram Guilfoyle   8 hours ago

    Maybe this is what happened to mtrueman.

    Log in to Reply
  13. Kemuel   7 hours ago

    Even if Tik Tok did create dangerous content, holding the platform responsible for the actions of its users removes their agency. It's offensive to the deceased to infantilize them.

    Log in to Reply
  14. Nobartium   7 hours ago

    Adult game crackdown on Steam

    Finally; quality control.

    Log in to Reply
    1. damikesc   7 hours ago

      Steam will regret, deeply, opening that door even a little.

      Log in to Reply
  15. Mickey Rat   7 hours ago

    Is not one of the exceptions to Section 230 whether the content is illegal?

    I imagine that "subway surfing" is an illegal activity.

    Log in to Reply
  16. Mickey Rat   7 hours ago

    ""Valve's famously permissive rules for what games are and are not allowed on Steam got a little less permissive this week, seemingly in response to outside pressure""

    The outside pressure coming from an Australian radical feminist group called "Collective Shout" who seemingly appeared out of nowhere.

    Demanding that payment services, like credit cards and such be the moral arbiters of what their users purchase is, ironically, rather similar to the Section 230 argument that Social media platforms can be the moral arbiters of the content of creators on their platforms.

    Log in to Reply
    1. damikesc   7 hours ago

      And groups that pop up out of nowhere and have immediate outsized influence sure does not SOUND like a total astroturf thing run by billionaires...

      Log in to Reply
  17. AT   7 hours ago

    I'm just going to say it again.

    Tort reform.

    We have got to break Americans of the belief that the tort judgment is the New American Dream.

    Log in to Reply
    1. NCMB   6 hours ago

      ^ this

      Log in to Reply
    2. Chumby   3 hours ago

      Torte reform? Ban anything resembling a napoleon?

      Log in to Reply
      1. AT   3 hours ago

        Careful, you're treading on thin icing.

        Sorry for not sugarcoating.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Chumby   24 minutes ago

          It won’t be easy as pie nor will it be a cake walk.

          Log in to Reply
  18. jimc5499   6 hours ago

    "We don't blame bookstores, or movie theaters, or streaming platforms if someone dies doing something they read about in a book or witnessed in a movie or TV show."
    What rock have you been hiding under. This has been happening for years.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Get To Da Chippah   17 minutes ago

      No kidding. Blaming TV for stupid stuff kids do is decades old. The Simpsons did an episode on it way back in their second season.

      https://simpsons.fandom.com/wiki/Itchy_%26_Scratchy_%26_Marge

      Log in to Reply
  19. NCMB   6 hours ago

    It’s horrible to see any child die because of a poor decision. But, unfortunately, it happens - kids are prone to making poor decisions.

    That said, I’d be interested to know who provided the child with the means to access the tick-tok/meta content. Did the parents buy and give to the child the phone, tablet or PC used to access the content? Do the parents pay for the internet connection used to access the platforms? It might be a dicey legal argument but could the parents contributorily responsible?

    Log in to Reply
  20. charliehall   5 hours ago

    The idiot Transportation Secretary Duffy thinks that subways in NY are dangerously deadly.

    Well, they are if you ride on top of the trains. Six people died doing that last year.

    11 people died for other reasons. With 3.5 million daily riders.

    With about 2 million vehicles in NYC, 253 people died in motor vehicle accidents.

    The dangerous part of riding the subway in NYC is that some inattentive driver will kill you while you are walking to the subway station.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   4 hours ago

      More idiocy from Charlie

      However, violent crimes, including misdemeanor assaults, have nearly doubled since 2014. There was also a notable increase in murders in the subway system, with 10 murders recorded in 2024, tied for the highest since 1997.

      Log in to Reply
    2. damikesc   3 hours ago

      Didn't an illegal orally and anally rape a dead body on a subway? Didn't an illegal set a sleeping woman afire on a subway?

      It's safety seems sketchy...even after Hochul sent police and troops to police the subways. For the safety.

      Log in to Reply
  21. TJJ2000   4 hours ago

    Can I sue Hollywood because I saw Chuck Norris dodged a thousand bullets but I could only dodge 2?

    This is the dumbest lawsuit ever.

    Log in to Reply
  22. CharlieG   4 hours ago

    It sounds like her son died because he did something stupid. At 15 he should have known what he was doing is stupid, something his mother should have taught him when he was a lot younger. Why blame others for her failure and her sons stupidity?

    Log in to Reply

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