City
Epaper

Centre directs e-commerce firms to analyse and remove dark patterns

By IANS | Updated: May 29, 2025 10:03 IST

New Delhi, May 29 To address the growing concern around dark patterns in digital commerce, the government has ...

Open in App

New Delhi, May 29 To address the growing concern around dark patterns in digital commerce, the government has directs all e-commerce companies to conduct self-audits to analyse and remove dark patterns in compliance with consumer protection.

Union Minister for Consumer Affairs, Pralhad Joshi, emphasised the importance of responsible industry behaviour, adding that the guidelines on dark patterns were the result of intensive consultations with various stakeholders, including leading e-commerce companies and industry associations.

With mutual agreement reached, the minister urged all companies to now fully comply with the guidelines and integrate them into their internal governance and consumer protection mechanisms.

“The consumers of today are vigilant, informed, and increasingly aware of their rights — they will not tolerate deceit,” said Joshi while chairing a high-level stakeholder meeting here.

The Department of Consumer Affairs convened the meeting which brought together key representatives from major e-commerce companies, industry associations, voluntary consumer organisations, and national law universities for a focused dialogue on eliminating deceptive online practices.

Highlighting recent developments, Joshi noted a significant surge in consumer complaints related to dark patterns on the National Consumer Helpline (NCH).

“Companies must not wait for the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) to intervene. They should proactively recognise and remove these deceptive practices before notices are issued. This is not just regulatory compliance — it’s about building trust with your consumers,” he stated.

He further noted that the creative ideas and technological solutions generated through ‘Dark Patterns Buster Hackathon 2023’ played a pivotal role in empowering the Department, in collaboration with IIT BHU, to develop three powerful consumer protection tools — the Jagriti App, Jago Grahak Jago App, and the Jagriti Dashboard.

"These tools are a testament to our resolve in combating deceptive design practices that mislead consumers online," the minister said.

Nidhi Khare, Secretary, Department of Consumer Affairs, provided an insightful introduction to the theme and outlined the Department’s multi-pronged efforts to address this pressing issue.

She highlighted the alarming rise of dark patterns — design elements used on websites and apps to mislead or coerce users into making unintended choices.

These practices, she noted, undermine consumer autonomy, manipulate purchasing behaviour, and have a detrimental impact on consumer trust and welfare. She emphasised that tackling dark patterns is essential for preserving consumer rights and ensuring fair digital trade.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessKnow about revised rail fares kicking in from tomorrow

NationalKnow about revised rail fares kicking in from tomorrow

Other SportsShreyas Iyer to undergo assessment at CoE after resuming batting post spleen injury

NationalBihar: Drug racket busted in Maner; six arrested

NationalK'taka Cong crisis: Shivakumar meets Kharge, says he has done every job for the party

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyAndhra marching towards ‘Quantum Yug’: Shivraj Singh Chouhan

TechnologyGST reforms, RDI scheme strengthened Indian pharma in 2025, innovation & access key for 2026

TechnologyCoupang says former employee saved data from only 3,000 customers, no external leak

TechnologySun Pharma’s Taro recalls over 17,000 units of antifungal shampoo in US: FDA

TechnologyAWS denies outage reports as users flag disruptions in US, India