Dark Patterns
Qu'est-ce que Dark Patterns ?
Dark PatternsDeceptive user-interface designs that nudge or trick users into actions against their interest — over-broad consent, hidden cancellations, sneak-in opt-ins — increasingly regulated under GDPR Article 5, the EU DSA, and U.S. FTC Click-to-Cancel rules.
Dark patterns is a term coined by UX researcher Harry Brignull in 2010 for user-interface designs that deceptively nudge users into actions counter to their own interest, such as accepting tracking, buying more, or staying subscribed. Common patterns include 'confirmshaming' opt-out wording ('No thanks, I don't want better deals'), pre-checked consent boxes, asymmetric button styling that makes 'Accept all' visually dominant, hidden costs revealed only at checkout, and 'roach motel' subscription flows where signup takes one click and cancellation takes a phone call. Regulators have moved from soft guidance to enforcement: the European Data Protection Board's 2022 dark-patterns guidelines apply GDPR Article 5(1)(a) fairness and transparency obligations; the EU Digital Services Act explicitly prohibits dark patterns for very large online platforms; the U.S. FTC's 'Click-to-Cancel' rule (2024) requires that cancellation be as easy as subscription; the California Privacy Protection Agency adopted dark-patterns regulations in 2023. From a privacy-engineering perspective, dark patterns are now both an ethical and a regulatory risk and increasingly a vector targeted by competitor reports, NGO-led audits, and class-action plaintiffs.
● Exemples
- 01
A 2023 EDPB enforcement action against a major newspaper required removal of asymmetric 'Accept all' vs hidden 'Reject all' cookie banners.
- 02
A U.S. streaming service redesigns its cancellation flow in 2024 to match the FTC Click-to-Cancel rule's same-channel, same-clicks symmetry.
● Questions fréquentes
Qu'est-ce que Dark Patterns ?
Deceptive user-interface designs that nudge or trick users into actions against their interest — over-broad consent, hidden cancellations, sneak-in opt-ins — increasingly regulated under GDPR Article 5, the EU DSA, and U.S. FTC Click-to-Cancel rules. Cette notion relève de la catégorie Confidentialité et protection des données en cybersécurité.
Que signifie Dark Patterns ?
Deceptive user-interface designs that nudge or trick users into actions against their interest — over-broad consent, hidden cancellations, sneak-in opt-ins — increasingly regulated under GDPR Article 5, the EU DSA, and U.S. FTC Click-to-Cancel rules.
Comment fonctionne Dark Patterns ?
Dark patterns is a term coined by UX researcher Harry Brignull in 2010 for user-interface designs that deceptively nudge users into actions counter to their own interest, such as accepting tracking, buying more, or staying subscribed. Common patterns include 'confirmshaming' opt-out wording ('No thanks, I don't want better deals'), pre-checked consent boxes, asymmetric button styling that makes 'Accept all' visually dominant, hidden costs revealed only at checkout, and 'roach motel' subscription flows where signup takes one click and cancellation takes a phone call. Regulators have moved from soft guidance to enforcement: the European Data Protection Board's 2022 dark-patterns guidelines apply GDPR Article 5(1)(a) fairness and transparency obligations; the EU Digital Services Act explicitly prohibits dark patterns for very large online platforms; the U.S. FTC's 'Click-to-Cancel' rule (2024) requires that cancellation be as easy as subscription; the California Privacy Protection Agency adopted dark-patterns regulations in 2023. From a privacy-engineering perspective, dark patterns are now both an ethical and a regulatory risk and increasingly a vector targeted by competitor reports, NGO-led audits, and class-action plaintiffs.
Comment se défendre contre Dark Patterns ?
Les défenses contre Dark Patterns combinent habituellement des contrôles techniques et des pratiques opérationnelles, comme détaillé dans la définition ci-dessus.
Quels sont les autres noms de Dark Patterns ?
Noms alternatifs courants : Deceptive design, Sludge patterns.
● Termes liés
- privacy№ 233
Gestion du consentement
Processus et outils permettant de recueillir, enregistrer, rafraîchir et appliquer les autorisations des utilisateurs pour le traitement des données personnelles et le dépôt de cookies, conformément à la loi.
- privacy№ 560
IAB TCF (Transparency and Consent Framework)
The Interactive Advertising Bureau Europe's framework for capturing, encoding, and propagating user consent for advertising and analytics data uses under GDPR — controversial, partly invalidated by Belgian DPA in 2022, then revised as TCF v2.2.
- privacy№ 494
Global Privacy Control (GPC)
A browser-level signal — an HTTP header and a JavaScript property — by which a user expresses a 'do not sell or share' opt-out, given binding legal force in California (CCPA/CPRA) and Colorado (CPA) regulations.
- compliance№ 488
RGPD
Règlement général sur la protection des données de l'Union européenne, encadrant le traitement des données personnelles des personnes situées dans l'UE et l'EEE.
- privacy№ 957
Privacy by Design
Approche d'ingénierie et de gouvernance intégrant la confidentialité dans les systèmes, processus et paramètres par défaut dès les premières phases de conception, et non a posteriori.
- compliance№ 167
CCPA
California Consumer Privacy Act, loi américaine de l'État de Californie qui confère aux résidents californiens des droits sur leurs informations personnelles.