The plaintiff's attorney in the social media trial strived to portray efforts by YouTube to dramatically ramp up viewing time as putting profit over the well-being of young users

The plaintiff's attorney in the social media trial strived to portray efforts by YouTube to dramatically ramp up viewing time as putting profit over the well-being of young users

A landmark social media addiction trial resumed Monday with a YouTube executive insisting that the Google-owned company's aim was to give people value, not hook them on harmful binge-viewing.

YouTube vice president of engineering Cristos Goodrow was pressed to defend the company's self-styled "big, hairy, audacious goal," set more than a decade ago, to increase viewer time to more than a billion hours a day by 2016.

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