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Learn about dark patterns, fair patterns and much more

Willing to dig further on dark patterns? Here are curated resources, including hundreds of publications we analyzed in our R&D Lab, conferences, webinars and job opportunities to fight dark patterns.

SIGCHI

The event is scheduled to hold virtually and in person in Hamburg, Germany on 26th April, 2023 from 14:30 to 15:55

Panelists will discuss their methodological approaches, key research questions to be considered in this emerging area of dark patterns, and necessary connections between and among disciplinary perspectives to engage with the diverse constituencies that frame their creation, use, and impacts.

SIGCHI

This event is scheduled to hold virtually and in person in Hamburg, Germany, on the 26th of April, 2023 from 16:35 to 18:00

Building on this convergent and trans-disciplinary research area of dark patterns, the aims of this SIG are to: 1) Provide an opportunity for researchers and practitioners to address methodologies for detecting, characterizing, and regulating dark patterns; 2) Identify opportunities for additional empirical work to characterize and demonstrate harms related to dark patterns; and 3) Aid in convergence among HCI, design, computational, regulatory, and legal perspectives on dark patterns. These goals will enable an internationally-diverse, engaged, and impactful research community to address the threats of dark patterns on digital systems.

Jobs

Career opportunities in digital regulation: Do you have experience working in the tech sector? Have you ever thought about using your skills and expertise to help build a better online environment for people and businesses? This is a careers event designed to provide an inside look at what a role in digital regulation could mean and highlight the roles which the Information Commissioner’s Office are recruit

Jobs

call for Expressions of Interest “Experts for the implementation of the EDPB’s Support Pool of Experts”. The EDPB is calling for expressions of interest is to set up a list of external experts for the implementation of the EDPB’s Support Pool of Experts, for the period 2022-2024. There are many areas of expertise involved, including dark patterns.

Forbrukkerådet

The Norwegian Consumer Council is an organisation which oversees consumer issues across various markets in Norway. It is very active against dark patterns and publishes its findings and resources on deceptive and cunning design in a segment of their website which may be found here. In their ‘Deceived by Design’ report, they chronicle how tech companies utilise dark patterns to prevent users from exercising their rights to privacy. Their work includes: Enough deception! Norwegian consumers’ experiences with deceptive design (2022) Insert coin: How the gaming industry exploits consumers using loot boxes (2022) You can log out, but you can never leave: How Amazon manipulates consumers to keep them subscribed to Amazon Prime (2021) Deceived by design: How tech companies use dark patterns to discourage us from exercising our rights to privacy (2018) Complaints are accepted in English and Norwegian and can be filed here: https://www.forbrukerradet.no/how-to-complain

BEUC

The BEUC has played a part in the fight against dark patterns by giving feedback on the ‘Guidelines 3/2022 on Dark Patterns in Social Media Platform interfaces: How to Recognise and Avoid Them’, where they push for privacy-by-default principles to be upheld, reiterating that refusing consent should be as easy as giving consent, and also offering practicable recommendations on how these laws can be better enforced and reformed. Some of their work includes: ‘Dark Patterns and the EU Consumer Law Acquis’ (2022) Presentation on the negative effects of dark patterns on the consumer and the digital single market at large (2022)

noyb

None of your business’ is an EU- focused nonprofit whose activity against dark patterns includes not only research endeavours and raising awareness, but also filing complaints against erring organisations and companies. They have in the past instituted 422 formal GDPR complaints against websites featuring cookie banners which employed dark patterns to gain user consent. Noyb also responded to the EDPB’s call for feedback on the Guidelines 3/2022 on Dark Patterns in Social Media Platform interfaces: How to Recognise and Avoid Them. Its project on dark patterns which raises awareness, takes legal steps, and reaches out to erring organisations about their shortcomings have led to an increase in compliant cookie banners. noyb’s comments on the Draft Guidelines 3/2022 on Dark Patterns In Social Media Platform Interfaces: How To Recognize And Avoid Them (2022) Cookie Banners Project (2021-) noyb files 422 formal GDPR complaints on nerve-wrecking “Cookie Banners” (2021) noyb has an ‘Exercise Your Rights’ series which informs users about their rights and ways to enforce them.

World Wide Web Foundation

Founded on the ideals of open, safe, and empowering access to the web, the Web foundation has actively worked against dark patterns through raising awareness and other activities including hosting a hackathon focused on solutions to dark patterns in fields such as e-commerce, e-transactions, and flight aggregation platforms. These Initiatives provide an environment for experts, regulators, and other stakeholders to participate in building a suitable legal framework for dark patterns. In collaboration with stakeholders across Africa, they developed a policy brief which can be adopted by regulators the world over in tackling dark patterns. Its Tech Policy Design Lab also aims to conduct a range of workshops to design policies and prototypes to tackle deceptive designs and publishes takeaways of its workshops on the Design Lab’s website. World Wide Web Foundation Tech Policy Design Lab on Dark Patterns Contact: techlab@webfoundation.org

CPDP2023 (Organised by Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SnT), University of Luxembourg)

This event is scheduled to hold on the 24th of May, 2023 at 08:45 a.m.

This discussion will address concerns about how we might detect, test, measure and regulate digital influences reliably when they are so varied, while identifying what constitutes manipulation is often based on more or less paternalistic views. It also will aim to consider • Attributes we can leverage to reliably measure the presence of dark patterns in digital services • Which legal, technical and design instruments we need to quantify dark patterns’ harms at large • How we might determine the risks engendered by dark patterns and whether there are particularly vulnerable users • How might we detect manipulation and potential for harm in emerging technologies?

CPDP2023 (Organised by ALTI - VU Amsterdam (NL))

This event is scheduled to hold on the 25th of May, 2023 by 17:15

This panel contextualises deceptive design through the lenses of regulation and fundamental rights, while offering insights into how the EU’s digital design acquis could be enforced to fight online manipulation. It considers: • Is the emerging legal regime of the EU for regulating digital design (e.g. DSA, UCPD, GDPR, AI Act) sufficient to regulate manipulation? • How do we develop a test for courts to determine if users are affected by the use of deceptive design or in the alternative, should regulators embrace the development of a legal test to determine online manipulation? • What is the relationship between profiling and deceptive design, and how does this relationship affect the regulation of deceptive design? • What is the role of fundamental rights in regulating deceptive design?

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