Hello – Nuclear power is shifting from a distant promise to an immediate growth story. U.S. energy plans call for tripling reactor capacity over the next 25 years, and major data-center operators are already reserving small modular reactors (SMRs)to secure reliable, low-cost, carbon-free power. To help investors get ahead of this accelerating trend, we’ve released an updated report: 7 Top Nuclear Stocks to Buy Now. Inside, you’ll learn about:
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Founder & CEO, MarketBeat P.S. Regulations can slow nuclear projects, but early investors could ride this multi-decade tailwind for years. Grab the list now and decide which of these seven leaders earns a place in your portfolio.
Further Reading from MarketBeat.com
Big Tech Just Got Hit—Why This Lawsuit Could Change Social Media ForeverBy Nathan Reiff. Article Published: 3/27/2026. 
Key Points
- The verdict against Meta Platforms and Google in late March 2026 in a trial surrounding the role of social media in personal injury to users may have massive implications.
- Though the financial damages are minor for these tech giants, the verdict may pave the way for much larger legal battles and, potentially, new regulations surrounding the design of social media platforms.
- At risk is significant volumes of ad revenue, capital expenditures potentially needed to redesign platforms, market share threats, and much more.
- Special Report: Elon’s “Hidden” Company
A recent landmark case against Meta Platforms Inc. (NASDAQ: META) and Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) suggests popular social media platforms may be held liable for users' personal injuries. In the ruling, the tech giants behind Instagram, Facebook and YouTube were ordered to pay millions in compensatory and punitive damages to an unidentified plaintiff who accused the companies of designing highly addictive products that harmed mental health.
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The damages are a drop in the bucket for these massive companies, but the implications—and potential fallout going forward—could be far more consequential for social media platform providers and their investors. Both firms' stocks were hit in the days around the verdict, with Meta shares falling about 13% and Alphabet roughly 8% over a five-day period at the end of March 2026. There may be a buying opportunity for some investors, but the larger question is whether Big Tech's business models will face broader restructuring—and, if so, how that would affect market share, valuation and other key metrics. Potential Impacts on Future Trials and ProductsThis trial is high-profile but not unique: social media companies routinely face lawsuits related to their platforms. Still, the finding in this case could shift the landscape for future suits, including multiple cases expected to go to trial as soon as this year. In the near term, that could mean greater exposure to additional damage judgments and the unwanted publicity that accompanies high-stakes litigation for these and other tech giants. More importantly, investors may see Big Tech pushed into a position similar to Big Tobacco decades ago, when major cigarette makers were held liable for the addictive and harmful nature of their products. Companies like Meta and Google have long cited Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996 to shield themselves from liability for content posted by users. But there is a real risk that courts could reject that defense and instead treat social media platforms themselves as defective products requiring redesign. If that happens, major changes to services like Facebook and Instagram may follow, although exactly how those services would be altered remains uncertain. Some of the features highlighted in the trial—such as infinite scroll, autoplayed content and algorithmic recommendations—could also affect how advertisements are delivered and monetized. What Investors Should Keep In MindSocial media is a meaningful source of revenue for companies like Meta and Alphabet, which have relied for years on rising engagement to drive ad sales. That growth continued into late 2025. In the last quarter of 2025, for example, Meta reported ad revenue growth of 24% year‑over‑year, helped by AI-driven ad performance and roughly 3.5 billion daily users across its products. Beyond potential ad-revenue declines, industry-wide legal exposure if platforms are deemed defectively designed could reach into the tens of billions of dollars and trigger mass arbitration, creating meaningful financial stress even for mega-cap tech companies in the tech sector. Investors should also expect companies to invest heavily to comply with any new safety regulations that may emerge after this or subsequent trials.
This could compress operating margins and add to already-high capital expenditures—many driven by the costs of integrating AI. It could also create an opening for differently designed competitors to gain market share in the social media landscape.
Investors may not view the verdict as a reason to abandon META and GOOG positions—indeed, both remain solid analyst favorites, with consensus price targets suggesting potential upside of roughly 60% for Alphabet and about 25% for Meta (consensus price targets). Still, the relatively small financial impact of this single case could ripple outward and produce much larger implications for social media as an industry and for these firms in particular. |
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