Netflix Wants Its Partners to Follow These Rules When Using Gen AI (3 minute read)
Netflix has published new guidelines requiring production partners to disclose generative AI usage and follow five specific rules to ensure responsible implementation. The guidelines prohibit replicating copyrighted material, storing production data, and replacing talent performances without consent while emphasizing audience trust. This follows backlash over AI-generated images in the documentary "What Jennifer Did" and aligns with Netflix's belief that AI can help creators make better, more cost-effective content.
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Pinterest Opens Up a Thrift Shop for Gen Z (2 minute read)
Pinterest's Thrift Shop is a new ecommerce experience that aggregates pre-owned items from vintage and thrift retailers across its platform. The initiative targets Gen Z users who prioritize sustainable shopping while seeking unique, affordable fashion pieces that reflect current trends like Y2K and boho styles. The experience runs from August 20 to September 26, featuring weekly closet drops from industry tastemakers to appeal to cost-conscious, environmentally aware consumers.
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Spotify launches a messaging feature in a bid to become more social (3 minute read)
Spotify is adding in-app one-on-one messaging so users can chat with friends they've previously shared content or playlists with, aiming to make the platform more social. The feature, initially rolling out in Latin and South America before expanding globally, keeps shared history in-app, allows emoji reactions, and is monitored for rule-breaking but not end-to-end encrypted. Users are able to disable it in settings if desired.
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Where AI is Failing Design Systems, and Where We are Failing AI (7 minute read)
AI excels at divergent tasks like brainstorming and research but struggles with convergent work requiring precision and consistency. Current AI tools produce probabilistic outputs that conflict with design systems' deterministic promises, creating trust issues when generating production-ready components or maintaining strict fidelity. The best results come from using AI as a collaborative tool for scaffolding and acceleration while maintaining rigorous testing and human oversight for system contracts.
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Designing for the Real World: How to Build Interfaces People Love to Use (5 minute read)
Digital products are typically designed under ideal conditions with fast internet, clear screens, and focused users, but real-world usage happens in noisy environments with distractions and technical limitations. UX designers must account for diverse contexts, including mobile-only users, network inconsistencies, cognitive load, and accessibility needs, rather than assuming optimal scenarios. Effective design requires testing in actual environments, creating inclusive personas, prioritizing mobile-first approaches, and building flexible systems that handle errors gracefully.
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Why we should be worried about Donald Trump's National Design Studio (8 minute read)
Design is at the center of US cultural and political focus as Trump launched America by Design, led by Airbnb co-founder Joe Gebbia as the first Chief Design Officer. The initiative aims to modernize government services over three years by improving usability, setting consistent standards, and enhancing design quality, starting with the overhaul of 26,000 federal websites.
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Get Feedback 2x Faster (Website)
Pastel is the easiest and fastest way for web designers, developers, and agencies to collect feedback on the websites they're building.
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Why Stakeholders Resist Your UX Work, And How To Fix It (13 minute read)
UX professionals often face resistance when presenting design work, typically stemming from stakeholders' fear of consequences or inability to see personal value in proposed changes. The key to overcoming this resistance lies in early stakeholder engagement through initial interviews, sharing unfinished work for feedback, and addressing hidden concerns before formal presentations. Success requires building trust by clearly articulating what will change, demonstrating high value with low risk, and transforming vague feedback like "I don't like it" into specific, actionable insights through targeted questioning.
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Motion Design is Cool, but Can Hurt Users β Here's How I Fixed It (4 minute read)
A parallax scroll effect that looked impressive in prototypes caused mobile users to experience lag, discomfort, and message loss during testing. The issue was fixed by removing parallax on mobile devices and replacing it with subtle fade-ins and gentle scale animations that maintained visual appeal without performance problems. Motion design must serve clear purposes, respect user preferences, and be tested across devices to enhance rather than hinder usability.
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Co-constructing intent with AI agents (14 minute read)
AI is highly effective for clear, specific tasks but struggles with vague or complex requests, often giving generic answers that miss the real intent. To become true partners, AI systems need to co-construct meaning with users through dialogue, memory, and multimodal cues, helping refine half-formed ideas into deeper insights and actionable outcomes.
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Jae Lee, Matej Latin & Ralph Brinker
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