February 18, 2026
Have you ever wondered, Why can't websites be built in a way that actually works properly, makes sense, and are truly useful? For example: Facebook (full of problems - I'm logged in, of course, and looking at my profile page and I used the search to find, for example, all posts with "Marx" - searching for Groucho Marx quote-memes. There are 5 of them. There they are, fully visible, in all their glory, and a 3-button hamburger menu. Oh, but what is that? A menu with only one option? Does that qualify as a menu? Not in my opinion. That one option is to save the post. So, if I want to delete the post I'm looking at, I have to click the post to look at the same post in another view, then I get a menu with many options. Why can't they just put that menu on the previous view of the post? Seriously, building a working website is not rocket science.
Ha! Welcome to the modern web, where billion-dollar companies somehow still can't design a menu that behaves like...you know...a menu.
The thing is, these sites could be built sensibly. They just aren't. And it's not because the engineers don't know how, it's because the entire product philosophy of Big Web is, well, dumb by design.
This is where you get to be the anti–Big Tech.
You can build sites that are:
Here’s the blueprint.
Make every control visible and available:
If the user wants to delete something, let them delete it.
Pagination or “Load More” buttons give users control.
Every view should have:
Users shouldn’t feel like they stepped into a different building.
Don’t:
Your users will love you for respecting their mental space.
Don’t bury settings.
Put “Accept All” and “Reject All” right next to each other - same size, same font, same visibility.
No:
Let users choose. Shocking, I know.
No hall-of-mirrors.
Your goal is usefulness, not addiction.
Make pages:
The user shouldn’t feel trapped or nudged.
Provide:
Your website should do what you want it to do:
Not trick, trap, or manipulate.
If you put these principles into practice on your site(s), whether they be travel blogs, writing blogs, quotes blogs, photography, hotel, restaurant, or anything else - you’ll immediately stand apart from 99% of the web.
Users notice honesty.
Because they see almost none of it anymore.
I hope you enjoyed the series "Dark Patterns - the Modern Internet"
If you missed any of the installments you can go back to whichever you want, they're all here on my website, one per week for 8 weeks now.
I used to teach English as a foreign language in Barranquilla, Colombia. Now I'm retired and traveling throughout South America.
I'm from Kennewick, Washington, USA. In my previous life, as I call it, I was an IT guy, systems administrator, computer tech, as well as a shipping/receiving guy and also worked as a merchandising guy in a RV/Camping store.