Deceptive Patterns
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“Okay, whatever”: An Evaluation of Cookie Consent Interfaces

Author
Hana Habib, Megan Li, Ellie Young, L. Cranor
Date
29 Apr 2022
Publisher
International Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Focus
Privacy & Data Protection
Category
Academic Scholar

A comprehensive, two-stage usability assessment of cookie consent interfaces suggests that a fully-blocking consent interface with in-line cookie options accompanied by a persistent button enabling users to later change their consent decision best meets several design objectives.

Many websites have added cookie consent interfaces to meet regulatory consent requirements. While prior work has demonstrated that they often use dark patterns — design techniques that lead users to less privacy-protective options — other usability aspects of these interfaces have been less explored. This study contributes a comprehensive, two-stage usability assessment of cookie consent interfaces. We first inspected 191 consent interfaces against five dark pattern heuristics and identified design choices that may impact usability. We then conducted a 1,109-participant online between-subjects experiment exploring the usability impact of seven design parameters. Participants were exposed to one of 12 consent interface variants during a shopping task on a prototype e-commerce website and answered a survey about their experience.