Open CDR-CX-Stream opened 3 weeks ago
The DSB engaged the University of South Australia (UniSA) to progress analysis on deceptive patterns, which has produced two reports: a landscape review of deceptive patterns (see: NP355), and the Deceptive Patterns Pressure Test. The purpose of this engagement was to better understand deceptive patterns in use and how the CDR may be vulnerable to them.
The second UniSA report and the DSB's proposed next steps are included in the original post.
The DSB engaged the University of South Australia (UniSA) to progress analysis on deceptive patterns, which has produced two reports: a landscape review of deceptive patterns (see: NP355), and the Deceptive Patterns Pressure Test. The purpose of this engagement was to better understand deceptive patterns in use and how the CDR may be vulnerable to them.
The second UniSA report can be found below: Deceptive Patterns Pressure Test (UniSA).pdf
Noting paper 359 provides a background and summary of the work on deceptive patterns, along with the DSB's next steps: NP359 - Deceptive Patterns Health Check - Next Steps.pdf
Please note this Noting Paper is not a formal consultation. No standards are being proposed in NP359 and feedback is not requested.