Dark Patterns Symbiosis Bright Patterns
Symbiosis ›

Trick Questions and Simple Consent

How to Apply

  • Use short, direct sentences for consent text, avoiding negatives and double negatives.
  • Place a single, clearly labeled primary action (e.g., “Allow”) and an equally clear alternative (e.g., “Don’t allow”).
  • Write checkbox and toggle labels so “On” means consent given and “Off” means no consent, with no inversions.
  • Allow users to change consent later
Dark Pattern

Trick Questions

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Uses confusing or misleading language to prompt users into making unintended or undesired choices.

Trick Questions
Illustration
Trick Questions subvert the user’s expectation that prompts will be written in a straightforward and intelligible manner, instead using confusing wording, double negatives, or otherwise leading language or interface cues to manipulate a user’s choice.

Contexts

  • checkout
  • consent

Harmed Goals

  • comprehension
  • control

Sources

Bright Pattern

Simple Consent

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Provides clear, unambiguous consent mechanisms for data collection and use.

Simple Consent
Illustration
This pattern involves obtaining clear and unambiguous consent from the user before collecting, using, or sharing their personal data. This can involve providing clear explanations of how the data will be used and providing easy-to-use options for opting in or out.

Interaction Contexts

  • settings

Sources

Pattern Levels

High-Level Patterns Strategy Domain & Context Diagnostic (abstract)

High-level patterns include general strategies that can be employed through a range of modalities and technologies and application types

Meso-Level Patterns Angle of Attack Domain & Context Diagnostic (interpretable)

Meso-level patterns describe a context-agnostic angle of attack and may be interpreted in relation to context based on the specific modality or application type

Low-Level Patterns Means of Execution Domain & Context Specific (situated)

Low-level patterns are situated and contextually dependent, including specific means of execution

Diagram: High (strategy, diagnostic), Meso (angle of attack, still diagnostic), Low (means of execution, context specific). Integrated textual descriptions appear within each layer.

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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.

Source:

How the Symbiosis Works

The symbiosis view connects dark patterns to bright alternatives

Dark Patterns match Bright Patterns

In the symbiosis view, each dark high/meso level pattern is paired with at least one matching bright pattern.

This view does not include low-level patterns, as these are implementation details. Refer to the related meso or high-level patterns for bright low-level alternatives.

Learn more about pattern levels in the pattern levels explainer.

Alternatives

Go into detail for each pair to see how a manipulative dark pattern can be replaced by an ethical bright pattern.

For that click on a pair in the symbiosis view to open its detail page. There you get a guide on how to apply the bright pattern and you can compare the bright pattern directly to the dark pattern.

Paul Bertram 2026
Impressum Datenschutz

Source not found.

Sources

A list of all sources used across the site. Click an entry to open the full reference.

Pattern Levels

High-Level Patterns Strategy Domain & Context Diagnostic (abstract)

High-level patterns include general strategies that can be employed through a range of modalities and technologies and application types

Meso-Level Patterns Angle of Attack Domain & Context Diagnostic (interpretable)

Meso-level patterns describe a context-agnostic angle of attack and may be interpreted in relation to context based on the specific modality or application type

Low-Level Patterns Means of Execution Domain & Context Specific (situated)

Low-level patterns are situated and contextually dependent, including specific means of execution

Diagram: High (strategy, diagnostic), Meso (angle of attack, still diagnostic), Low (means of execution, context specific). Integrated textual descriptions appear within each layer.