A small, rural Kentucky school district has secured a massive $27 million payout from tech giants including Meta, TikTok and YouTube. The settlements come after the district sued the companies, claiming their platforms fueled a severe student mental health crisis. Citing court documents, news agency Reuters reported that the exact financial terms for the first time with Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, agreeing to pay the largest slice of the pie at $9 million.The remaining $18 million will be paid by co-defendants which include Snapchat-parent company Snap, ($8 million), TikTok-parent ByteDance ($8 million) and Alphabet’s YouTube ($2.01 million). As part of its agreement, YouTube will also provide the district with specialised training on Google Classroom and other educational tools.Tech giants deny chargesThe Breathitt County School District, located in a rural Appalachian county, accused the tech companies of intentionally designing addictive platforms to keep kids hooked. The lawsuit argued this addiction led to surging anxiety, depression and self-harm among students, forcing underfunded schools to deal with the fallout.While the tech companies agreed to the multi-million dollar payouts to avoid a massive trial, the settlements do not require them to admit any wrongdoing, the report said, adding, they are also not legally forced to change how their apps or algorithms work.In separate statements, representatives for Meta, YouTube, and Snapchat stated they resolved the case and will continue developing features aimed at keeping young users safe.A warning sign for over 1,200 other districtsThe Breathitt County case serves as a test case used by lawyers and judges to see how future lawsuits might play out. While Breathitt is small, serving only about 1,600 students across six schools, it is just the tip of the iceberg.Attorneys are already moving forward with similar claims on behalf of 1,200 other school districts across the United States. And the financial stakes are about to get much higher.Meanwhile, Meta has already warned its investors that growing legal and regulatory blowback over youth mental health and social media addiction “could significantly impact” its business and financial results.