Considering that prior research has found older users undergo a different
privacy decision-making process compared to younger adults, more research is
needed to inform the behavioral privacy disclosure effects of these strategies
for different age groups. To address this gap, we used an existing dataset of
an experiment with a photo-tagging Facebook application. This experiment had a
2x2x5 between-subjects design where the manipulations were common dark pattern
design strategies: framing (positive vs. negative), privacy defaults (opt-in
vs. opt-out), and justification messages (positive normative, negative
normative, positive rationale, negative rationale, none). We compared older
(above 65 years old, N=44) and young adults (18 to 25 years old, N=162) privacy
concerns and disclosure behaviors (i.e., accepting or refusing automated photo
tagging) in the scope of dark pattern design. Overall, we find support for the
effectiveness of dark pattern designs in the sense that positive framing and
opt-out privacy defaults significantly increased disclosure behavior, while
negative justification messages significantly decreased privacy concerns.
Regarding older adults, our results show that certain dark patterns do lead to
more disclosure than for younger adults, but also to increased privacy concerns
for older adults than for younger