Deceptive Patterns
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Deceptive Patterns of Intelligent and Interactive Writing Assistants

Author
Karim Benharrak, Tim Zindulka, Daniel Buschek
Date
14 Apr 2024
Publisher
Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Intelligent and Interactive Writing Assistants
Focus
AI & Automation
Category
Academic Scholar

This work conceptually transfer several deceptive patterns from the literature to the new context of AI writing assistants, to raise awareness and encourage future research into how the UI and interaction design of such systems can impact people and their writing.

Large Language Models have become an integral part of new intelligent and interactive writing assistants. Many are offered commercially with a chatbot-like UI, such as ChatGPT, and provide little information about their inner workings. This makes this new type of widespread system a potential target for deceptive design patterns. For example, such assistants might exploit hidden costs by providing guidance up until a certain point before asking for a fee to see the rest. As another example, they might sneak unwanted content/edits into longer generated or revised text pieces (e.g. to influence the expressed opinion). With these and other examples, we conceptually transfer several deceptive patterns from the literature to the new context of AI writing assistants.