June 4, 2026
Chromebooks train schoolkids to be loyal customers, internal Google document suggests


Internal documents revealed as part of a child safety lawsuit hint at Googleโ€™s plan to โ€œonboard kidsโ€ into its ecosystem by investing in schools. In this November 2020 presentation, Google writes that getting kids into its ecosystem โ€œleads to brand trust and loyalty over their lifetime,โ€ as reported earlier by NBC News.

The heavily-redacted documents, which surfaced earlier this week, are linked to a massive lawsuit filed by several school districts, families, and state attorneys general, accusing Google, Meta, ByteDance, and Snap of creating โ€œaddictive and dangerousโ€ products that have harmed young usersโ€™ mental health. (Snap settled earlier this week).

Google has spent over a decade investing in products built for education, while establishing Chromebooks as a classroom staple. The 2020 document also includes a study on how the laptop brands used in schools have an โ€œinfluence on purchase patterns.โ€

Another slide in the presentation highlights a 2017 story from The New York Times, bolding a quote that says Google is part of a battle to โ€œhook students as future customers.โ€ This quote appears multiple times in the presentation: โ€œIf you get someone on your operating system early, then you get that loyalty early, and potentially for life.โ€ The document also suggests that YouTube in schools could create a โ€œpipeline of future usersโ€ and creators.

At the same time, other slides discuss some of the challenges associated with bringing YouTube to schools, including how the platform is โ€œoften blockedโ€ and how โ€œefforts to make YouTube safe for schools have yet to work.โ€ The documents also acknowledge the potential impact of YouTube on mental health, with one 2024 presentation showing a slide that says โ€œmany regret time lost when they unintentionally โ€˜go down the rabbit hole,โ€™โ€ or that YouTube โ€œโ€˜distractedโ€™ them from work or even getting to bed on time.โ€โ€™

In an emailed statement to The Verge, Google spokesperson Jack Malon says the documents โ€œmischaracterizeโ€ the companyโ€™s work. โ€œYouTube does not market directly to schools and we have responded to meet the strong demand from educators for high-quality, curriculum-aligned content,โ€ Malon says. โ€œAdministrators maintain full control over platform usage and YouTube requires schools to obtain parental consent before granting access to YouTube for students under 18.โ€

Jury selection for the social media addiction trial will start on January 27th, 2026.

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