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We are offering a 3-year postdoctoral position for interdisciplinary research on dark patterns. Dark design patterns are deceptive, manipulative or restrictive UX design choices that steer users into making decisions they would not make otherwise. Dark patterns can cause financial loss, trick users into revealing personal data, and induce addictive behaviour.
The project will investigate real-world uses of dark patterns, their effects on people's behaviour, and the challenges they bring for the protection of individuals' rights online (e.g. from a consumer protection or data protection law perspective).
You will collaborate with researchers with a background in human-computer interaction (H. Schraffenberger), computer science (G. Acar), and law (R.M. Gellert). You will be expected to contribute to research on large-scale measurements to detect dark patterns on online platforms, and user studies to investigate their manipulative, deceptive and coercive effects. The research focus may be tailored to your specific interests.
Your duties will include developing, conducting and publishing interdisciplinary research on dark patterns; contributing to and participating in the iHub and the Digital Security group's general activities; and writing grant proposals. If so desired, educational activities can be arranged according to your preferences.
Fixed-term contract: three years.
You will be part of a vibrant international research environment at Radboud University, and join the Interdisciplinary Hub for Digitalisation and Society (iHub) and the Digital Security Group of the Institute for Computing and Information Sciences (iCIS).
iHub brings together a diverse range of scholars from across the humanities, social sciences, law, engineering and natural sciences to tackle urgent questions raised by the increased digitalisation and datafication of science and society. iHub's mission is to better understand the effects of digitalisation on our society and to help steer digital transformations in ways commensurate with public values. The Digital Security Group works on a broad range of topics in computer security, including applied cryptography, security protocols, privacy, and the security and correctness of software.
The Digital Security Group is one of the leading groups in computer security in the Netherlands and Europe, with, for example, 4 ERC grants in the last decade and a strong involvement in European projects.
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