Andrew Benton's Blog

1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna

Experian is a pile of dark pattern garbage

Many years ago I froze my credit with all three credit reporting agencies in the US. This was a fairly straightforward process that differed slightly at each agency, but mostly involved getting a numeric PIN that I then used to request temporary unfreezes from time to time.

In February of 2023 I attempted to request an unfreeze from Experian, but the process had changed. They wanted me to create some kind of account to manage my credit freeze, using an email and password. This seemed harmless enough, since I think at least one other agency was requiring something similar at that point, so I started the process.

But by the end, I had somehow signed up for a “free” membership called “Experian Creditworks℠ Basic: Free.” I tried a lot of workarounds, but as best I can tell there is no way to avoid creating this account in order to manage a credit freeze online with Experian.

Of course after gaining access to my new account, and browsing the dashboard, there was no obvious way to actually manage a credit freeze. But naturally there were a number of ways for Experian to upsell me various products and services of dubious quality.

For instance, in the “Protection” section of the dashboard, where you might expect to find credit freeze management features, there is instead a link to something called “Experian CreditLock.” This is a materially identical service to the credit freeze service which they are required by law to offer free of charge, except the CreditLock service costs money.

image

In order to actually manage a credit freeze, you have to scroll past the upsell call-to-action to find a small text link:

image

This is barely discoverable to me, someone who has built web application software professionally. I can’t imagine how my mom would avoid the upsell trap. She’d almost certainly end up paying for Experian’s CreditLock service at some point. Knowing this makes it harder for me to recommend that she freeze her credit, which is really maddening.

Technically this does qualify as a free credit freeze service though, which is something. But I am now getting multiple Experian marketing emails each week, masquerading as “account-related” transactional messages.

image

In that most recent email titled “Andrew, you have 1 new credit alert to review,” the following text appears at the bottom:

Why am I receiving this email?
This is not a marketing email—you’re receiving this message to notify you of a recent change to your account. If you’ve unsubscribed from Experian CreditWorks℠ Basic emails in the past, don’t worry—you no longer receive newsletters or special offers.
You can update some alerts and communications preferences any time on your Experian CreditWorks℠ Basic profile, but you’ll continue to receive notifications like this one on the status of your account.

But of course just above that text there’s this link enticing me to “Gain access” to some nice-sounding stuff:

image

And when I click to “Gain access” I am taken immediately to this page asking me to pay for an account upgrade:

image

If this doesn’t qualify as marketing, then marketing has lost all meaning.

I don’t want to give up on the idea of accountability for dark pattern abusers like Experian, but I’m not sure how to proceed. Maybe there’s a complaint I can file with the FTC/FCC. In any case I’ve now made myself feel a little better by ranting about Experian on the internet.

Thanks for reading and sharing my outrage.

Pinned Post

An introduction

I’m a software engineer, startup founder and occasional angel investor currently living in San Francisco. I have a toddler at home who I take care of full-time, and my partner and I have another on the way.

I’ve worked on a few interesting things in the past. I worked at Twilio on a lot of user-facing things from 2010 through the end of 2012, including the account dashboard, API and documentation. I started and ran a consumer VoIP and messaging company called Charge (originally Bolt) from 2013 to 2018-ish. And I was the COO at ngrok for a little while before my first kid was born.

I also started an oat milk ice cream project and a nylon dish scrubber project, mostly for fun.

The latest thing I’ve been tinkering with is https://oneway.tel, mostly as a testing ground for some API proxy service ideas I am exploring.

I used to use Twitter, under the handle @sircromulent. And I used to write longer things on a now-archived self-hosted blog.

Here’s my avatar/face blown up, just to test out the inline image feature:

Andrew Benton's headshotALT
intro post