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Designing Inclusive Products

Designing Inclusive Products

Most of us start projects with good intentions—we want to make things welcoming, seamless, and maybe even fun to use. But too often, toxic cultures within tech result in products that have all sorts of biases embedded in them: “smart scales” that assume everyone wants to lose weight, form fields that fail for queer people, image-recognition software that doesn’t work for people of color. As tech becomes increasingly central to our users' days—and intertwined with their most intimate lives—we have more responsibility than ever to consider who could be harmed or left out by our decisions.

Sara Wachter-Boettcher

June 15, 2018
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Transcript

  1. To recap: • There’s no way to turn it off

    • This is dangerous for people with eating disorders • This feels shamey • “Average” calorie counts are wildly inaccurate • Not all calories are equal • A cupcake is not a useful metric • Pink cupcakes are not neutral—they have social and culture encoding (feminine, white, middle class) • This perpetuates diet culture
  2. ‘‘ Silicon Valley is run by people [who] want to

    be in the tech business, but are in the people business. They are way, way in over their heads. —Zeynep Tufekci
  3. ‘‘ Twitter is failing in its responsibility to respect women’s

    rights online by inadequately investigating and responding to reports of violence and abuse in a transparent manner. —Amnesty International, 
 March 2018
  4. ‘‘ We love instant, public, global messaging… But we didn’t

    fully predict or understand the real-world negative consequences. We acknowledge that now… 
 We aren’t proud of how people have taken advantage of our service, or our inability to address it fast enough. —Jack Dorsey, March 2018
  5. ‘‘ We suck at dealing with abuse and trolls on

    the platform and we’ve sucked at it for years… We lose core user after core user by not addressing simple trolling issues that they face every day. I’m frankly ashamed of how poorly we’ve dealt with this issue during my tenure as CEO. It’s absurd. There’s no excuse for it. —Dick Costolo, February 2015
  6. • Cartoons about torture and suicide • Sexualized characters and

    themes • Violence and weapons • Kids being tied up and hurt • Kids vomiting and writhing in pain
  7. Image: Google I/O • How will we trust who we’re

    talking to? • Is it OK for a bot to pretend it’s human? • What does recording the call mean for privacy? • Is it fair to outsource task to bots and expect low-wage workers to deal with it?
  8. ‘‘ We stress-tested Tay under a variety of conditions, specifically

    to make interacting with Tay a positive experience. —Peter Lee, Microsoft Research
  9. ‘‘ We stress-tested Tay under a variety of conditions, specifically

    to make interacting with Tay a positive experience. —Peter Lee, Microsoft Research
  10. ‘‘ We talked about getting rid of it but it

    performs kinda great :/ —Tag Savage, lead writer at Tumblr
  11. ‘‘ We are deeply sorry for this unquestionably serious issue.

    It is an unfortunate side-effect of the underlying neural network caused by the training set bias, not intended behaviour. — Yaroslav Goncharov, FaceApp CEO
  12. ‘‘ We are deeply sorry for this unquestionably serious issue.

    It is an unfortunate side-effect of the underlying neural network caused by the training set bias, not intended behaviour. — Yaroslav Goncharov, FaceApp CEO
  13. ‘‘ We’re also working on longer-term fixes around both linguistics

    (words to be careful about in photos of people)… and image recognition itself (e.g., better recognition of dark-skinned faces). —Yonatan Zunger, former Googler
  14. ‘‘ We’re also working on longer-term fixes around both linguistics

    (words to be careful about in photos of people)… and image recognition itself (e.g., better recognition of dark-skinned faces). —Yonatan Zunger, former Googler
  15. ‘‘ When the person in the photo is a white

    man, the software is right 99 percent of the time. But the darker the skin, the more errors arise — up to nearly 35 percent for images of darker skinned women. —“Facial Recognition Is Accurate, if You’re a White Guy”
 by Steve Lohr, The New York Times
  16. ‘‘ When the person in the photo is a white

    man, the software is right 99 percent of the time. But the darker the skin, the more errors arise — up to nearly 35 percent for images of darker skinned women. —“Facial Recognition Is Accurate, if You’re a White Guy”
 by Steve Lohr, The New York Times
  17. ‘‘ If you’re not asking yourself “how could this be

    used to hurt someone” in your design/engineering process, you’ve failed. — Zoe Quinn
  18. • The user had a good year. • The user

    wants to relive their year. • The user wants to share their year. • The user’s most popular content is positive.
  19. • Identity • Location • Emotional state • Physical state

    • Personal history • Lifestyle • Goals • Pain points
  20. ‘‘ My hair type is what’s called ‘4C hair,’ given

    the level of coiliness. I learned that I needed to add that to my searches in order to find things. It shouldn’t be that way. — Candice Morgan, 
 Head of Diversity & Inclusion, Pinterest
  21. Make inclusive design an explicit part of: • Project roles

    and responsibilities • Roadmapping and project planning • Use cases and scenarios • Content crits and editing cycles • Project postmortems • Employee evaluations
  22. ‘‘ We’re an idealistic and optimistic company. For the first

    decade, we really focused on all the good that connecting people brings… But it’s clear now that we didn’t do enough. We didn’t focus enough on preventing abuse and thinking through how people could use these tools to do harm as well. —Mark Zuckerberg, April 2018
  23. ‘‘ As most companies grow, they slow down too much

    because they’re more afraid of making mistakes than they are of losing opportunities by moving too slowly. We have a saying: “Move fast and break things.” The idea is that if you never break anything, you’re probably not moving fast enough. —Mark Zuckerberg, 2012
  24. ‘‘ As most companies grow, they slow down too much

    because they’re more afraid of making mistakes than they are of losing opportunities by moving too slowly. We have a saying: “Move fast and break things.” The idea is that if you never break anything, you’re probably not moving fast enough. —Mark Zuckerberg, 2012