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Main Authors: Sheil, Ashley, Acar, Gunes, Schraffenberger, Hanna, Gellert, Raphaël, Malone, David
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.17145
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author Sheil, Ashley
Acar, Gunes
Schraffenberger, Hanna
Gellert, Raphaël
Malone, David
author_facet Sheil, Ashley
Acar, Gunes
Schraffenberger, Hanna
Gellert, Raphaël
Malone, David
contents Subscribing to online services is typically a straightforward process, but cancelling them can be arduous and confusing -- causing many to resign and continue paying for services they no longer use. Making the cancellation intentionally difficult is recognized as a dark pattern called Roach Motel. This paper characterizes the subscription and cancellation flows of popular news websites from four different countries, and discusses them in the context of recent regulatory changes. We study the design features that make it difficult to cancel a subscription and find several cancellation flows that feature intentional barriers, such as forcing users to type in a phrase or call a representative. Further, we find many subscription flows that do not adequately inform users about recurring charges. Our results point to a growing need for effective regulation of designs that trick, coerce, or manipulate users into paying for subscriptions they do not want.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2309_17145
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Staying at the Roach Motel: Cross-Country Analysis of Manipulative Subscription and Cancellation Flows
Sheil, Ashley
Acar, Gunes
Schraffenberger, Hanna
Gellert, Raphaël
Malone, David
Human-Computer Interaction
Subscribing to online services is typically a straightforward process, but cancelling them can be arduous and confusing -- causing many to resign and continue paying for services they no longer use. Making the cancellation intentionally difficult is recognized as a dark pattern called Roach Motel. This paper characterizes the subscription and cancellation flows of popular news websites from four different countries, and discusses them in the context of recent regulatory changes. We study the design features that make it difficult to cancel a subscription and find several cancellation flows that feature intentional barriers, such as forcing users to type in a phrase or call a representative. Further, we find many subscription flows that do not adequately inform users about recurring charges. Our results point to a growing need for effective regulation of designs that trick, coerce, or manipulate users into paying for subscriptions they do not want.
title Staying at the Roach Motel: Cross-Country Analysis of Manipulative Subscription and Cancellation Flows
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.17145