USWDS

USWDS Monthly Call - October 2020

Deceptive design patterns—also known as “Dark Patterns”

Thursday, October 15, 2020 2:30 PM – 3:30 PM ET

Hosted by Digital.gov and the U.S. Web Design System

The U.S. Web Design System logo

Deceptive design patterns—also known as “Dark Patterns”—are techniques used in websites and apps to trick people into taking specific unintended actions (like, signing up for things they didn’t mean to). In this talk, Ron Bronson from 18F will uncover some of these tricks, and show what we all can do to assure that deceptive design patterns stay out of the sites we build.

We’ll also hear the latest news and updates from the U.S. Web Design System.

This event is part of a monthly series that takes place on the third Thursday of each month. We post the video on Digital.gov shortly after each event.

USWDS is a library of principles, guidance, and code to help government teams design and build fast, accessible, mobile-friendly government websites backed by user research and modern best practices.

About the USWDS

The U.S. Web Design System is a toolkit of principles, guidance, and code to help government teams design and build accessible, mobile-friendly websites backed by user research and modern best practices.

In this talk

Originally posted by Dan Williams on Oct 15, 2020

GSA | Portland, OR

Originally posted by Ron Bronson on Oct 15, 2020

GSA | Portland, OR