General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) , Governance & Risk Management , Privacy

Dark Patterns: How Weaponized Usability Hurts Users

Fresh Legislation Targets Deceptive, Privacy-Shredding Interface Design
Dark Patterns: How Weaponized Usability Hurts Users
Source: EFF, ISMG

"Dark patterns" are out to get you, but you may not even be able to see them.

See Also: OnDemand | Protect and Govern Sensitive Data

What are dark patterns? The term might bring to mind the vampire-focused camp-Gothic soap opera of a similar name that was on TV decades ago.

This threat, however, is not only real but insidious, in that it weaponizes usability to trick users.

In the web world, usability refers to the practice of designing easy-to-use user interfaces.

But what if designers don't have a user's best interests at heart, but instead want to trick them? That's the shadowy push behind dark patterns, which information security veteran Wendy Nather defines as being "the abuse of what we have been conditioned to understand as being user interface rules."

Unfortunately, this type of abuse can be tough to spot, as Nather demonstrated by showing numerous example of such practices in a session at the 10th annual IRISSCERT Cyber Crime Conference in Dublin last November (see: Cybercrime Conference Returns to Dublin).

Tactics include "bait and switch" prompts where a user clicks one thing, only to have the unexpected happen - such as clicking an "X" to close a Microsoft prompt, only to have that result in the installation of Windows 10, she said. Misdirection is another common ploy, involving design that focuses users on a big, bold option, while making it difficult to see other options that might be more in line with what a user actually wants to do.

"The problem with malicious design is that it's not necessarily extra code; it's not malware," said Wendy Nather, speaking at the IRISSCON cybersecurity conference in Dublin on Nov. 22, 2018. (Photo: Mathew Schwartz)

Senators Target Malicious Design

Now, efforts are afoot to banish dark patterns, which at their best trick users into doing things they wouldn't normally do, and at their worst can compromise the security of their personal data as well as their privacy.

On Tuesday, U.S. senators Mark Warner, D-Va., and Deb Fischer, R-Neb., introduced legislation called the Deceptive Experiences To Online Users Reduction Act.

A summary of the DETOUR bill draft says that it would "prohibit large online platforms from using deceptive user interfaces, known as 'dark patterns,' to trick consumers into handing over their personal data" as well as "promote consumer welfare in the use of behavioral research by such providers."

Warner, a former technology executive who's now vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, says the goal of the legislation is simple: Improve transparency to enable users to be better informed before they share their personal information.

"For years, social media platforms have been relying on all sorts of tricks and tools to convince users to hand over their personal data without really understanding what they are consenting to," he says. "Some of the most nefarious strategies rely on 'dark patterns' - deceptive interfaces and default settings, drawing on tricks of behavioral psychology, designed to undermine user autonomy and push consumers into doing things they wouldn't otherwise do, like hand over all of their personal data to be exploited for commercial purposes."

"Any privacy policy involving consent is weakened by the presence of dark patterns," says Fischer, who's a member of the Senate Commerce Committee. "Misleading prompts to just click the 'OK' button can often transfer your contacts, messages, browsing activity, photos or location information without you even realizing it."

Detour Act Final by on Scribd

In a related legislative effort, Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., plans to introduce a bill on Thursday that would ban dark patterns in sites or services that target children, which he says are too often used for marketing purposes as well as to direct children to inappropriate websites.

Markey's bill, called the Kids Internet Design and Safety Act, would specifically ban "manipulative and damaging design features," restrict the types of advertising that can be used to target children as well as require organizations to create guidance for parents on "kid-healthy content," among other stipulations.

In Europe, meanwhile, any abuse of user interface design that leads to users inadvertently sharing personal information could be grounds for users to file a General Data Protection Regulation complaint with their country's data protection watchdog. Regulators could launch reviews of websites and fine organizations for using such practices to obtain private data.

"Thank goodness for GDPR, because it is causing people to look at what they have and why they have it," said Nather, who's head of advisory CISOs for Cisco's Duo Security group. "We need a willingness to correct mistakes, which is another problem we have with breach disclosure ... and we need empathy."

Guide to Spotting Evil Design

One challenge with dark patterns, however, can be detecting them. "The problem with malicious design is that it's not necessarily extra code; it's not malware," Nather said.

Source: darkpatterns.org

Drawing on the work of the Dark Patterns website, for example, Nather said at IRISSCON that such tactics may fall into multiple camps, including:

  • Bait and switch: Users think they're clicking one type of prompt, only to be sent elsewhere. One example was Microsoft trying to entice Windows users to upgrade to Windows 10, at one point running a pop-up window that would begin the upgrade even if a user clicked the X in the upper-right side of the box, which should have closed the window.
  • Confirmshaming: Using guilt to drive someone into accepting something, aka the "yes I want to let the orphans starve" dialog, Nather said. Such tactics often get used to get users to sign up for mailing lists.
  • Disguised ads: Content that appears to be legitimate, but which is really disguised display advertising, designed to get users to click on it.
  • Misdirection: Purposefully focusing a user on one thing so they don't see another.
  • Roach motel: The design of a site makes it easy for a user to end up in a situation but difficult to get out. Ticketmaster, for example, has been known to sneak magazine subscriptions into a customer's shopping cart unless they explicitly opt out.
  • Trick questions: Trick phrasing leaves users unclear about whether clicking "no" might mean "yes," or follows a checkbox for opting out with a checkbox for opting in.

Eh Tu, Facebook?

Privacy expert Ashkan Soltani, who previously served as the Federal Trade Commission's CTO, says Facebook is a frequent dark patterns offender.

Earlier this month, for example, multiple news outlets reported that as part of its new-account "confirmation flow," Facebook was requiring users who signed up for the social network using an email address from one of several providers - including AOL, Comcast, Hotmail, GMX, Yahoo and Yandex - to give Facebook the password to their email account.

Digital rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation says users should never share the password for one service with another service. And using a dummy account to study the Facebook confirmation flow, it found that after users shared the password, Facebook began harvesting their contacts on the webmail service without asking first.

Source: EFF

EFF reported: "When we clicked 'Connect to yandex.com,' an overlay with a status bar appeared. 'Authenticating,' it said. But wait - 'Importing contacts?' When did that happen? What? How? Why??"

Source: EFF

Following negative press, EFF says Facebook appears to have stopped harvesting contacts in this manner.

Facebook didn't immediately reply to a request for comment.

Good Design: Security Upsides

In the information security realm, good usability can forestall a host of security problems by making it easier and more intuitive to use everything from passwords and two-factor authentication to anti-phishing tools and the security features built into operating systems.

Nather used utensils as a simile for the benefit of good design: "Security should be as easy to use as a spoon - after you're a toddler, you rarely pick it up wrong."

For designers, however, crafting things that seem simple to use can be deceptively difficult, requiring intense time and labor.

Many have lauded numerous Apple products, such as the iPhone, because they seem intuitive to use. The same goes for many leading apps or websites, ranging from eBay to ESPN to Zillow.

Good, usable design is inevitably the result of an untold amount of iteration and testing.

Unfortunately, some organizations seem to have been devoting similar resources to honing their dark patterns.

But organizations that use usability as a force for good have the opportunity to not only foster better data security, but also greater trust with users, Nather said, especially if they do so in an open, transparent and ongoing manner.


About the Author

Mathew J. Schwartz

Mathew J. Schwartz

Executive Editor, DataBreachToday & Europe, ISMG

Schwartz is an award-winning journalist with two decades of experience in magazines, newspapers and electronic media. He has covered the information security and privacy sector throughout his career. Before joining Information Security Media Group in 2014, where he now serves as the executive editor, DataBreachToday and for European news coverage, Schwartz was the information security beat reporter for InformationWeek and a frequent contributor to DarkReading, among other publications. He lives in Scotland.




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