Digital financial services increasingly employ manipulative interface designs, known as dark patterns, which subtly influence user behavior and decision-making. This study examines the manifestations, mechanisms, and impacts of dark patterns in Chinese digital financial service platforms. Observed patterns include lengthy user agreements, concealed fees, repeated exit prompts, automatic lender assignment, and obstructed account cancellation. These strategies exploit users’ bounded rationality, attention limits, and behavioral biases. Vulnerable users with low financial literacy or constrained resources face heightened risks, including over-borrowing and debt stress. While platforms may gain short-term engagement, they risk long-term reputational and regulatory consequences. At the market level, dark patterns distort transparency, competition, and innovation.
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Hidden Traps in Digital Financial Services: Exploring Dark Patterns and Their Impact on Users
The systemic and covert nature of dark patterns in Chinese digital financial service platforms are emphasized, highlighting the need for ethical design, regulatory oversight, and strategies to protect user welfare in digital financial service ecosystems.