Meta used AI to target workers with medical conditions for layoffs, lawsuit claims
META•Meta said it planned 10% layoffs and denied the claims
Meta earlier this year said it planned to lay off 10% of its global workforce, or nearly 8,000 people, beginning in May, with more job cuts coming later.
The 26 plaintiffs, who filed the lawsuit anonymously, are accusing Meta of violating federal and state laws that ban discrimination or retaliation against workers who have disabilities, take medical leave or are pregnant. The plaintiffs come from six states, including California and New York plus the District of Columbia.
A Meta spokesperson on Tuesday said the claims lack merit.
"Workforce management and organizational decisions were and are made by people, not AI," the spokesperson said.
Lawsuit alleges AI-driven layoffs disproportionately hit workers with disabilities
Twenty-six former employees of Meta Platforms have filed a lawsuit against the tech company, accusing it of using AI-powered software that disproportionately targeted people with disabilities or who took medical leave in selecting people for mass layoffs.
The lawsuit, filed in Oakland, California, federal court late Monday, says that the company relied on factors such as productivity and token usage when it began slashing thousands of jobs earlier this year, disadvantaging people who missed work because of medical conditions.




