I just wanted to take a moment to enjoy how clean the web can be

DanForever@lemmy.world to Technology@lemmy.world – 1493 points –

I happened to click a link that took me to the associated twitter X account for something I was interested in and was greeted by not one, not two, but four modern day web popups.

I know it's nothing new. I've got a couple of firefox plugins that are usually quite good at hiding this sort of nonsense, but I guess they failed me today (or, I shudder to think, there were even more that were blocked, and this is what got through)

What's the worst new/not-signed-in user experience you've encountered recently?

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I have a very hard time believing that these companies are unaware of how auful this shit makes their webpages.

If this were a competent company, I'd say that they're entirely aware of it and how fucking awful it is, but that there's a mandate coming from somewhere that the page MUST include x, y and z and so they add x, y and z but usually try to at least make the site usable.

This being Twitter, though, I'm sure it's because a screaming man-child threw a sink at someone and told them to do it or they'll be fired and so they did it in the most half-assed obnoxious way they could manage.

Common language used to dismiss bad decisions like this:

  • We need to track and meet our metrics for the quarter
  • Engagement for $FEATURE is down, so we have to take measures to get people to take notice
  • It's opt-in/opt-out, so it's the right thing to do
  • It's only a one time thing and then the system remembers^1^ what the user selected
  • Only new users are affected - our power users will put up with it
  • It's just a minor inconvenience, really
  • It's just a website

1 - Oh, did you turn off cookies or clear your cache? Sorry about that.

Pretty sure you just triggered every developer and/or person who had to sit through a product meeting.

Though you missed the last bullet point: Our user surveys showed that people would actually prefer these changes

Pretty sure you just triggered every developer and/or person who had to sit through a product meeting.

NGL, I was feeling very uncomfortable myself by the end of typing said list. Is it hot in here? I need to lie down.

Anyone can make a good website. It takes a real engineer to make a horrible website that people will use just enough while suffering.

That's a very good quote.

Inspired from the quote “Any idiot can build a bridge that stands, but it takes an engineer to build a bridge that barely stands.”

Source: Unknown

I do a lot of my browsing from an iPhone 11. At least twice a day, a page will crash and reload halfway through whatever article I was trying to read. I get it’s a few generations old, but since when do you need state of the art tech to view what should be a static page.

It's diminishing customer experience creep, except the company doesn't understand what the user data means. They run A/B tests of different layouts, seeing what kind of feedback each gets to learn more about design choices and users. Each version should get its own feedback and then that data is compiled by data scientists into actionable feedback, things that can be done to improve the website in the direction the company thinks is an "improvement".

Twitter abandoned those data scientists with the initial layoffs. There is no one to tell them what works and what impacts the customer experience, which is why each time the internal question of "how do we open up for engagement?" they answer it the same way, "Use existing user bases by linking their account to Twitter." The result is several login requests all looking for the same cookie.

It's lazy or inexperienced management. Knowing the type of person Elon hires, it's probably both.

I barely see them pop up, if they do it's for a fraction of a second before a browser extension nukes them.

Well, unless you're a nerd, you only see those messages once

on top of what others have said - directing you to the app and login - it’s also likely just that teams don’t talk and make decisions that solve their local issue without too much for the whole, and then say “ugh team x solved this so inelegantly! we were forced to do our thing that wasn’t as nice!”

I mean, they kinda don't. Companies are entities made out of policies guiding how people split up objectives into smaller parts. The more people involved and the more indirect it is, the less coherent it gets

Legal says you need one popup for compliance. Marketing or analytics say you need more users to log in. Elon wants to remind people to call it Twitter.

By the time it filters through managers to the devs, they probably know it'll be a horrible experience, but what are they going to do? It's not their job. They'll get brushed off. There might even be a compelling reason to do it in this way - with this in particular, annoying and intrusive popups are malicious compliance with the EU cookie laws. But everyone seems to be doing it this way - that's probably what legal is going to recommend rather than interpreting the law themselves

So the problem is the structure. If you want a hierarchy of obedient replaceable cogs, you've made sure no one sees the full picture

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