axbom’s avataraxbom’s Twitter Archive—№ 31,529

            1. Who wants to debate me on this? Setting the default organ donor policy to 'opt-out' is not nudging. It does not change behavior. It does not change choices made. Most people will keep making no choice. Making a choice FOR people is exploiting inherent inaction, not changing it.
          1. …in reply to @axbom
            The morality question is whether that exploitation of a human circumstance can be argued as bringing positive outcomes in a way that outweighs negative ones. But to claim you have nudged people into a new behavior is misleading and frankly a weird take on what behavior is.
        1. …in reply to @axbom
          I will claim that everyone's stance on being an organ donor did not change overnight in England, but outcomes have changed DESPITE there being no behavior change whatsoever. Zilch. It's called legislation. axbom/1262990742433210369?s=20
      1. …in reply to @axbom
        I think people are confused by this because the organ-donor narrative is part of so many behavioral science books. But... there is a huge difference between offering an online consent form with a default value (nudging) and changing the law in one swift move (legislation).
    1. …in reply to @axbom
      Same for this oft-cited example. Making an automated decision FOR people is not an example of nudging behavior. It is an example of legislation, regulation and policy design. bi.team/blogs/automatic-enrolment-and-pensions-a-behavioural-success-story/
  1. …in reply to @axbom