Chapter 16: Misdirection
Misdirection, like most types of deception, has been practised throughout human history. Whether by a pickpocket, a stage magician, or through the design of a user interface, the principles remain the same:1
‘Simply stated, misdirection is the psychological technique used to lead or manipulate the spectators’ and volunteers’ eyes and minds to see what the magician wants them to. Their attention is focused in one direction while the trick is worked elsewhere. Misdirection is not pointing and saying “Look at that!” and then doing something sneaky in the opposite direction. That is a crude form of misdirection that does not work well, nor does it leave a good impression with the audience. The techniques used by good magicians are subtle and sophisticated. So much so that the people in the audience never know they have been manipulated.’
— Eddie Joseph (1992) How to Pick Pockets for Fun and Profit
The confirmshaming deceptive pattern
The term ‘confirmshaming’ was popularised by an anonymous blogger who started the confirmshaming tumblr blog in 2016.2
Confirmshaming is the use of emotional manipulation to misdirect users, and to push them into opting into something (or opting out of something else).3 For example, the option to decline may be worded in such a way as to shame you into compliance – you feel so bad about saying no, you end up choosing yes. The most common use of confirmshaming is in mailing list dialogs that pop up when you arrive on a site or via some other trigger.
Confirmshaming by Sears
Here, the retailer Sears uses emotional manipulation and wordplay by labelling the marketing email opt out button, ‘No thanks, I hate free money’. This is an archetypal example of confirmshaming. After all, Sears is not offering free money. It is inviting the user to subscribe to a mailing list that will give them a $10 discount on a purchase with Sears.4
Confirmshaming by MyMedic
This example was discovered by Per Axbom. He referred to it as ‘the worst example of #confirmshaming I’ve been subjected to.’5 MyMedic sells first aid packs and medical supplies. In asking permission for its website to send you notifications, the opt-out link label is presented as ‘no, I don’t want to stay alive’. This is particularly troubling given that some of its target customers are people likely to be exposed to the trauma of accidents and death in their work.6
The visual interference deceptive pattern
This deceptive pattern involves hiding content that a user might reasonably expect to be shown on the page. There are several ways to do this.
Visual interference by Trello: pushing users into the expensive ‘Business Class’ subscription
In January 2021, an anonymous twitter user (@ohhellohellohii) pointed out a deceptive pattern being used by Trello in its sign-up user journey.7 If you’re not familiar with Trello, it’s a collaboration tool that lets teams of people view ‘cards’ of information on a digital board, often used by creative teams. At a glance, a Trello board shows you what’s being worked on and who’s doing the work.8
Trello is well known for having a free-to-use plan, which gives people the chance to trial and adopt the platform with a fairly generous allowance of projects and storage space. It’s one of the reasons why Trello became popular: people started using it for free, grew to love it, and then upgraded to paid plans. In 2017, Trello was bought by tech giant Atlassian for $425 million. However, in January 2021, the Trello product team used a tweaked sign-up experience that appeared to be an attempt to deliver more fee-paying customers on their most expensive plan, ‘Business Class’.
Having clicked an innocent looking ‘Sign up’ button, users were shown a comparison table with three plans: ‘Free Team’, ‘Standard Team’ and ‘Business Class Team’. Instead of giving users the means to pick just one, there was a huge green button that said ‘Start 30-day free trial’. To all intents and purposes, it appeared there was no other option. However, if users had the presence of mind to scroll down past what seemed to be the bottom of the page, they would find a small grey box labelled ‘Start without Business Class’ (pictured below).9
There were a number of related tricks at work here. Let’s take them one by one.
First, there was the issue of hiding a button on the canvas below the bottom of the viewport (aka ‘below the fold’). If users’ browser windows were too small, they wouldn’t see the ‘Start without Business Class’ button at all. This is about user expectations. They’d have no reason to expect such an important button to be hidden way down there, because users trust businesses to build products in a predictable way.
Trello also used other visual tricks. The boundary of the white box appeared to signify the end of the main content area, and it’s a common convention to only place ancillary footer text below this sort of visual divider (like the copyright message and the legalese). In this example, the ‘Start without Business Class’ button was outside the visual bounds of the main content area, employing visual interference and violating user expectations again.
Finally, we have the difference in visual prominence of the buttons themselves. The ‘Start 30-day free trial’ button was colourful and high contrast, whereas the ‘Start without Business Class’ button was muted and low contrast. In fact, it didn’t look like a button at all, and it certainly didn’t invite users to click it.
At this point, it’s also worth saying that if a business takes advantage of visual perception, then it unfairly targets people with visual impairments since they don’t have the visual acuity necessary to perceive small or low-contrast text. However, it should be noted that people with serious visual impairments may employ assistive technologies like Apple VoiceOver, a screen reader application that reads pages aloud using a voice synthesiser, and therefore visual deception does not occur.10
It’s not clear how long Trello kept the offending page live. It may have been an A/B test that was shown to a limited number of people before being discarded. As I write, the sign-up process is now an altogether more honest design:11
Visual interference by YouTube: a near-invisible close button
‘Freemium’ is a portmanteau, a word that smashes two terms together to create a new, if somewhat clumsy term. If a service is freemium – a combination of ‘free’ and ‘premium’ – then it’s offering a two-tier pricing strategy to consumers. One approach to freemium involves letting users have a free account indefinitely with no contract, but then to persuade those users to upgrade and pay for a premium account that has extra features. It’s become a commonplace online commercial strategy, because – well, who doesn’t want something for free? By having a huge free user-base, the business gets an audience on whom they can test various persuasive tactics.
In January 2021, Twitter user @bigslabomeat pointed out that YouTube was deploying a deceptive pattern that would get users to sign up for a premium free trial.12 As you’ll see, users weren’t given an obvious means to continue with the free tier product. Rather, they needed to take notice of a tiny, low contrast X at the top right of the page, and deduce that tapping the X would then effectively reject the offer of the free trial. A classic example of visual interference.13
Visual interference by Tesla: non-refundable accidental app purchases
At the end of 2019, Tesla introduced a new feature to its mobile app. Put simply, the updated app let Tesla car owners buy upgrades for their vehicles, such as an autopilot that would unlock ‘Full Self-Driving’ capabilities.14 At over $4,000, these were significant add-ons.
After this feature was introduced, a number of Tesla car owners made it known that they’d made a new feature purchase by mistake, and Tesla was refusing to provide any refunds. Journalist Ted Stein provided an analysis, describing the nature of the techniques used.15 On the payment screen, the wording ‘Upgrades cannot be refunded’ appeared in small, very low contrast dark grey text on a black background, effectively hiding it from users.16
Tesla customer (and well-known author) Nassim Nicholas Taleb ran into this problem in January 2020 and he asked for a refund. He received a denial from Tesla’s customer support, which he published on Twitter.17 They told him...