Cost transparency
This pattern involves showing users the detailed breakdown of the costs involved in producing and selling a product or service. This pattern respects the users curiosity and trust, and does not try to hide or inflate the margins or profits of the vendor.
Interaction Contexts
- checkout
Symbiosis
Dark counterparts to this bright pattern
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Hiding InformationView pair →Withholds or delays key details, making it harder for users to make fully informed decisions during their interaction. -
Forced ContinuityView pair →Users are automatically charged for ongoing subscriptions after trials end, often without clear notice or easy cancellation.
Sources
Pattern Levels
Source not found.
Approach: semantic vs flipping
Two different approaches to Bright Patterns:
1
Semantic Approach
This approach is used by Sandhaus. It defines concrete Bright Patterns for specific contexts — for example the Bright Pattern "Usage Limits", which describes an interface that restricts the usage time of a service to a healthy level.
2
Flipping Dark Patterns
The original way the term "Bright Pattern" was introduced: the direction of the manipulation is switched from harming the user to being user-friendly. For example, instead of highlighting the option that harms the user, the user-friendly option is highlighted.
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