ICYMI: the week's 7 biggest tech stories from the landmark social media addiction trial to more Netflix price hikes
Here's your firmware update for March 28
· TechRadarNews By Hamish Hector Contributions from Matt Evans, Lance Ulanoff, Mark Wilson, Matt Bolton, Sam Kieldsen published 28 March 2026
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This week, we saw major decisions that could rock the tech world, as social media was called addictive in a landmark trial, and the US banned foreign Wi-Fi routers.
To catch up on this, as well as the latest reviews and other essential tech news stories, scroll down for our full ICYMI recap of the week.
When you’re done here, be sure also to read our experts’ picks for the seven new movies and TV shows to watch this weekend.
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1. Social media declared addictive
On Wednesday, a Los Angeles jury found that Meta and Google are liable for designing products that are deliberately addictive, a case that could change social media forever. The plaintiff, a woman known only as KGM, testified that "she became addicted to YouTube at age six and Instagram at nine", leading to body image issues and self-harm.
KGM's lawyers, in their closing remarks, said: “How do you make a child never put down the phone? That’s called the engineering of addiction." We pinpointed three persuasive tricks social media companies use to keep users glued to their screens, and exactly how the infinite-scroll loop hijacks children's still-developing brains — all according to the latest scientific research.
- Read the full story: 'The 'engineering of addiction' explained
2. We heard the Sonos Play in all of its glory
We’ve spent a few weeks testing the Sonos Play speaker, and it’s a real return to form for Sonos. Not because it’s the best-sounding speaker in the world (though it’s really impressive for something that size) or because it has every feature imaginable (though it offers more options than basically anything else in its price range) — but because it gets back to what Sonos was known for: speakers so convenient that you’ll listen to more music than ever.
It’s a battery-powered portable speaker that’s compact and light enough to grab and take around with you, but that’s also powerful and high-quality enough to use as your main home wireless speaker in a room. That means it’s always grabbable at a moment's notice, so we found ourselves using it more often, in more places, than with other portable speakers.
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