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An Ontology of Dark Patterns: Foundations, Definitions, and a Structure for Transdisciplinary Action

Interdisciplinary Studies

An Ontology of Dark Patterns: Foundations, Definitions, and a Structure for Transdisciplinary Action

C. M. Gray, N. Bielova, et al.

Deceptive and coercive "dark patterns" undermine consumer choice and blur responsibilities across designers, technologists, and regulators. This paper harmonizes ten academic and regulatory taxonomies into a three-level ontology with standardized definitions for 64 dark-pattern types, and shows how it can drive translational research and regulatory action. This research was conducted by Colin M. Gray, Nataliia Bielova, Cristiana Santos, and Thomas Mildner.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Deceptive and coercive design practices are increasingly used by companies to extract profit, harvest data, and limit consumer choice. Dark patterns represent the most common contemporary amalgamation of these problematic practices, connecting designers, technologists, scholars, regulators, and legal professionals in transdisciplinary dialogue. However, a lack of universally accepted definitions across the academic, legislative, practitioner, and regulatory space has likely limited the impact that scholarship on dark patterns might have in supporting sanctions and evolved design practices. In this paper, we seek to support the development of a shared language of dark patterns, harmonizing ten existing regulatory and academic taxonomies of dark patterns and proposing a three-level ontology with standardized definitions for 64 synthesized dark pattern types across low-, meso-, and high-level patterns. We illustrate how this ontology can support translational research and regulatory action, including transdisciplinary pathways to extend our initial types through new empirical work across application and technology domains.
Publisher
Proceedings of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '24)
Published On
May 11, 2024
Authors
Colin M. Gray, Nataliia Bielova, Cristiana Santos, Thomas Mildner
Tags
dark patterns
deceptive design
taxonomy harmonization
three-level ontology
consumer protection
regulatory action
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