Screenshot? What are you, a goldfish?
Comment on New Samsung phones block sideloading by default
Fisch@discuss.tchncs.de 3 months agoBig difference is that that one setting was shown to you with a button press when you tried to install an app. With this, you need to remember or make a screenshot of where you need to go, open the settings app and then go there and toggle it on. It’s just a lot more annoying to do and Samsung probably hopes that that will deter people from doing it.
Tenniswaffles@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 months ago
filcuk@lemmy.zip 3 months ago
…Why? What’s the point? What do they possibly hope to achieve?
Fisch@discuss.tchncs.de 3 months ago
I would guess making their phones seem more secure because people get less malware. I still think it’s stupid tho.
sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 3 months ago
That, or just pushing people to use their app store instead.
ivanafterall@lemmy.world 3 months ago
Which is a bit rich given that the Play store is 90% shitty, nefarious apps.
Excrubulent@slrpnk.net 3 months ago
Dark patterns work, they have the data.
See, the field of UI/UX design is very concerned with how to make the actions a user wants easier, how to streamline common actions and clearly communicate what each item does. To that end they’ve studied how apps get used with user interaction data. You can track with statistics whether cartain actions get taken more of less often with each change.
Of course this doesn’t tell you what a user wants, only what they do. To understand what they want you need to couple this process with user reports and complaints to see where the pain points are.
However, a company doesn’t need data to know what it wants users to do, and it’s a very simple step to take all this data and understanding and flip it on its head, to stop users doing what they want, and on average it makes a difference. It might not stop you, but it might stop your grandparents, or Dave from accounting. That’s the problem.
In know the EU us taking steps to make this sort of thing illegal, but it’s difficult to prove. I also got a letter from a consumer advocacy board in my country warning about dark patterns, so it seems like attention is starting to build on this issue.
xavier666@lemm.ee 3 months ago
Just standard corporate dark patterns