A deceptive user interface design that manipulates users into taking actions they didn't intend, such as subscribing to services, sharing personal data, or making purchases through misleading buttons, hidden options, and confusing layouts.
A deceptive user interface design that manipulates users into taking actions they didn't intend, such as subscribing to services, sharing personal data, or making purchases through misleading buttons, hidden options, and confusing layouts.
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Dark patterns are design choices deliberately crafted to trick users. Named by UX researcher Harry Brignull, these interfaces exploit cognitive biases and human tendencies to manipulate behavior. They're the digital equivalent of a store layout designed to make you buy things you don't need.
Common dark patterns include: "roach motels" (easy to sign up, hard to cancel), "confirmshaming" (guilt-tripping opt-out buttons like "No thanks, I don't want to save money"), hidden costs revealed at checkout, and "misdirection" where design draws attention away from unfavorable options.
Regulators are increasingly cracking down on dark patterns. The FTC has taken action against companies using them, and the EU's Digital Services Act specifically addresses deceptive design practices. Despite this, dark patterns remain pervasive across the web.
Amazon's Prime cancellation process was found to involve a 6-step, multi-page process that the FTC described as deliberately designed to prevent cancellation. Amazon called the internal project "Iliad" after the epic Homer poem, seemingly acknowledging the odyssey users faced.