It’s Here! “Understanding Privacy,” A New Smashing Book Is Shipping Now

What is privacy? What exactly does it mean? How do we consider, manage and maintain privacy? And how dow do we design and build experiences that have privacy at their heart? That’s exactly what Understanding Privacy is all about: a practical guide to privacy on the web, from data collection and use of personal data to creating safe, inclusive experiences for everyone.

From the still-relevant Privacy by Design Framework to the recent conflicts over consent and health data, Heather Burns has created an indespensible resource for anyone working to build safety and trust into their interfaces.

About The Book

Understanding Privacy is a practical guide to the concepts and ideas that inform privacy on the web. It’s about all the fundamental values of privacy as a concept, which precede privacy as a legal compliance issue. It’s about the ways these concepts impact your work as a designer, a developer, or a project manager. And it’s about the ways you can adopt these principles to create a healthy, user-centric approach to privacy in everything you do.

Heather Burns, a tech policy and regulation specialist, explains what she has experienced working on privacy from every angle — human rights, law, policy, and web development — in the simplest way possible, and in the most positive way possible, in ways you can understand, use, and adapt in your work on the web right away.

A look inside the book: a quality, hardcover print, with a little boomark.

This book is not a legal reference manual. After reading it, you will have shifted your understanding from a negative view of privacy as a scary legal compliance obligation to a positive view of privacy as an opportunity to build and design a better web. Download a free PDF sample (11MB).

288 pages. Written by Heather Burns. Cover design by Espen Brunborg. Both eBook and print shipping are now available.

You’ll Learn:
  • Fundamental concepts, definitions and frameworks behind privacy and data protection,
  • Healthy approach to user privacy into everything you build and design,
  • Common privacy issues and how you can make a difference,
  • How to lay the ground for future developers, designers, and project managers to build a better web for tomorrow,
  • The obligations we have to safeguard user privacy and health data.

Who Is This Book For?

Understanding Privacy is for designers, developers, and project managers who want to understand what privacy really is about and who want to integrate a healthy approach to user privacy into everything they do not only to put their users first today but also to help build a better web for tomorrow.

A double-spread of Understanding: an honest, practical and clear guide to privacy. Table Of Contents
1. Privacy and You
+

In the book’s first section, “Privacy and You,” Heather reviews the fundamental concepts, definitions and frameworks behind privacy and data protection.

2. Privacy and Your Work
+

In the second section, “Privacy and Your Work,” Heather discusses how to integrate a healthy approach to user privacy into everything you do, whether you are a designer, a developer, or a project manager.

3. Privacy and Your Users
+

“Privacy and Your Users” covers issues around user privacy where you can make a difference. We’re going to learn how to consider the power dynamics of what you create, regardless of the role you play.

4. Privacy and Your Future
+

In “Privacy and Your Future,” Heather suggests a few critical areas that make the web a better place and lay the ground for future developers, designers, and project managers to build a better web for tomorrow’s users.

Postscript: Privacy and Health Data
+

In the final section, “Privacy and Health Data,” Heather addresses an even more pressing recent issue: the obligations we have to safeguard user privacy and health data, and how to do it as best we can.

288 pages. Both eBook and print shipping are now available. Written by Heather Burns. Cover design by Espen Brunborg.

About The Author

Heather Burns (@WebDevLaw) is a tech policy professional and an advocate for an open Internet which upholds the human rights to privacy, accessibility, and freedom of expression. She’s been passionate about privacy since she built her first web site in 1996, and has educated thousands of professionals worldwide on the fundamentals of a healthy approach to protecting people and their data. She lives in Glasgow, Scotland.

The book comes with practical examples, guidelines and checklists to keep in mind when designing and building with privacy in mind. Reviews And Testimonials
“Heather's broad knowledge, experience, and ability to articulate these complex matters is nothing short of astounding. I’ve learned an amazing amount from her. She always informs and entertains, and she does so from the heart.”

Mike Little, Co-Founder of WordPress
“No more excuses for overlooking privacy: Heather’s guide is an essential toolbox for user-centric product developers and for anyone interested in building a better web. Expect the full sweep, from historical context and core concepts in US and EU privacy practice, to practical tips and advice — dispensed in highly readable style.”

Natasha Lomas, Senior Reporter, Techcrunch.com
“Privacy is an oft-talked about and rarely understood part of our modern digital lives. Heather has been on the forefront for the battle of our privacy for decades. In this book she makes the case for why privacy is one of the foundational pillars on which our society rests, and why eroding our privacy means eroding a cornerstone of our lives, our communities, and our democracy. A must-read for anyone working on or with the web.”

Morten Rand-Hendriksen, Senior Staff Instructor, LinkedIn Learning
“Privacy can seem complicated but it doesn’t need to be. Heather covers all that you need to know with astonishing clarity. This book gives you all you need to understand and handle privacy work, and makes for great teaching material that experts could rely on.”

Robin Berjon, former Head of Data Governance at The New York Times
Technical Details
  • ISBN: 978-3-945749-64-7 (print)
  • Quality hardcover, stitched binding, ribbon page marker.
  • Free worldwide shipping from Germany.
  • eBook is available as PDF, ePUB, and Amazon Kindle.
  • Get the book (Print Hardcover + eBook)
Community Matters ❤️

Producing a book takes quite a bit of time, and we couldn’t pull it off without the support of our wonderful community. A huge shout-out to Smashing Members for the kind, ongoing support. The eBook is and always will be free for Smashing Members. Plus, Members get a friendly discount when purchasing their printed copy. Just sayin’! ;-)

More Smashing Books & Goodies

Promoting best practices and providing you with practical tips to master your daily coding and design challenges has always been (and will be) at the core of everything we do at Smashing.

In the past few years, we were very lucky to have worked together with some talented, caring people from the web community to publish their wealth of experience as printed books that stand the test of time. Steven and Stefan are two of these people. Have you checked out their books already?

Touch Design for Mobile Interfaces

How touchscreen devices work and how people use them.

Add to cart $44

TypeScript In 50 Lessons

Everything about TypeScript, its type system and its benefits.

Add to cart $44

Smart Interface Design Patterns

Deck of 166 cards with common UX questions to ask.

Add to cart $39

Understanding Privacy: A New Smashing Book Is Here

To many of us, privacy might feel like a complex, abstract concept. We can’t hold privacy in our hands, we can’t touch it, we can’t explore its volume or shape with our eyes or our fingertips. Surely it’s a part of each of us, yet it feels so intangible and so invisible — beyond reach and out of view.

So what is privacy? What exactly does it mean? How do we consider, manage and maintain privacy? And how dow do we design and build experiences that have privacy at their heart? That’s exactly what Understanding Privacy is all about: a practical guide to privacy on the web, from data collection and use of personal data to creating safe, inclusive experiences for everyone. Jump to table of contents ↓

About The Book

Understanding Privacy is a practical guide to the concepts and ideas that inform privacy on the web. It’s about all the fundamental values of privacy as a concept, which precede privacy as a legal compliance issue. It’s about the ways these concepts impact your work as a designer, a developer, or a project manager. And it’s about the ways you can adopt these principles to create a healthy, user-centric approach to privacy in everything you do.

Heather Burns, a tech policy and regulation specialist, explains what she has experienced working on privacy from every angle — human rights, law, policy, and web development — in the simplest way possible, and in the most positive way possible, in ways you can understand, use, and adapt in your work on the web right away.

All chapters in the book have custom illustrations, highlighting the topic of the book.

This book is not a legal reference manual. After reading it, you will have shifted your understanding from a negative view of privacy as a scary legal compliance obligation to a positive view of privacy as an opportunity to build and design a better web. Download a free PDF sample (11MB).

288 pages. Written by Heather Burns. Cover design by Espen Brunborg. eBook now available, print shipping in November.

You’ll Learn:
  • Fundamental concepts, definitions and frameworks behind privacy and data protection,
  • Healthy approach to user privacy into everything you build and design,
  • Common privacy issues and how you can make a difference,
  • How to lay the ground for future developers, designers, and project managers to build a better web for tomorrow,
  • The obligations we have to safeguard user privacy and health data.

Who Is This Book For?

Understanding Privacy is for designers, developers, and project managers who want to understand what privacy really is about and who want to integrate a healthy approach to user privacy into everything they do not only to put their users first today but also to help build a better web for tomorrow.

A double-spread of Understanding: an honest, practical and clear guide to privacy. Table Of Contents
1. Privacy and You
+

In the book’s first section, “Privacy and You,” Heather reviews the fundamental concepts, definitions and frameworks behind privacy and data protection.

2. Privacy and Your Work
+

In the second section, “Privacy and Your Work,” Heather discusses how to integrate a healthy approach to user privacy into everything you do, whether you are a designer, a developer, or a project manager.

3. Privacy and Your Users
+

“Privacy and Your Users” covers issues around user privacy where you can make a difference. We’re going to learn how to consider the power dynamics of what you create, regardless of the role you play.

4. Privacy and Your Future
+

In “Privacy and Your Future,” Heather suggests a few critical areas that make the web a better place and lay the ground for future developers, designers, and project managers to build a better web for tomorrow’s users.

Postscript: Privacy and Health Data
+

In the final section, “Privacy and Health Data,” Heather addresses an even more pressing recent issue: the obligations we have to safeguard user privacy and health data, and how to do it as best we can.

288 pages. eBook now available, print shipping in November. Written by Heather Burns. Cover design by Espen Brunborg.

About the Author

Heather Burns (@WebDevLaw) is a tech policy professional and an advocate for an open Internet which upholds the human rights to privacy, accessibility, and freedom of expression. She’s been passionate about privacy since she built her first web site in 1996, and has educated thousands of professionals worldwide on the fundamentals of a healthy approach to protecting people and their data. She lives in Glasgow, Scotland.

The book comes with practical guidelines and checklists to keep in mind when designing and building with privacy in mind. Reviews and Testimonials
“Heather's broad knowledge, experience, and ability to articulate these complex matters is nothing short of astounding. I’ve learned an amazing amount from her. She always informs and entertains, and she does so from the heart.”

Mike Little, Co-Founder of WordPress
“No more excuses for overlooking privacy: Heather’s guide is an essential toolbox for user-centric product developers and for anyone interested in building a better web. Expect the full sweep, from historical context and core concepts in US and EU privacy practice, to practical tips and advice — dispensed in highly readable style.”

Natasha Lomas, Senior Reporter, Techcrunch.com
“Privacy is an oft-talked about and rarely understood part of our modern digital lives. Heather has been on the forefront for the battle of our privacy for decades. In this book she makes the case for why privacy is one of the foundational pillars on which our society rests, and why eroding our privacy means eroding a cornerstone of our lives, our communities, and our democracy. A must-read for anyone working on or with the web.”

Morten Rand-Hendriksen, Senior Staff Instructor, LinkedIn Learning
“Privacy can seem complicated but it doesn’t need to be. Heather covers all that you need to know with astonishing clarity. This book gives you all you need to understand and handle privacy work, and makes for great teaching material that experts could rely on.”

Robin Berjon, former Head of Data Governance at The New York Times
Technical Details
  • ISBN: 978-3-945749-64-7 (print)
  • Quality hardcover, stitched binding, ribbon page marker.
  • Free worldwide shipping from Germany, starting in November 2022.
  • eBook is already available as PDF, ePUB, and Amazon Kindle.
  • Get the book (Print Hardcover + eBook)
Community Matters ❤️

Producing a book takes quite a bit of time, and we couldn’t pull it off without the support of our wonderful community. A huge shout-out to Smashing Members for the kind, ongoing support. The eBook is and always will be free for Smashing Members. Plus, Members get a friendly discount when purchasing their printed copy. Just sayin’! ;-)

More Smashing Books & Goodies

Promoting best practices and providing you with practical tips to master your daily coding and design challenges has always been (and will be) at the core of everything we do at Smashing.

In the past few years, we were very lucky to have worked together with some talented, caring people from the web community to publish their wealth of experience as printed books that stand the test of time. Steven and Stefan are two of these people. Have you checked out their books already?

Touch Design for Mobile Interfaces

How touchscreen devices work and how people use them.

Add to cart $44

TypeScript In 50 Lessons

Everything about TypeScript, its type system and its benefits.

Add to cart $44

Smart Interface Design Patterns

Deck of 166 cards with common UX questions to ask.

Add to cart $39

Meet Understanding Privacy, A New Smashing Book By Heather Burns

Privacy by design is possible, but over time, it has become challenging to build and deploy sites and apps that use personal information in practical ways that are safe and ethical. In fact, many of us have given up at least a little of our own privacy online.

And so in our work, it may become easier to rationalize collecting more user data than we need, to avoid transparency around how that data is used, and even to use that data for unintended purposes. We tell ourselves it is for the convenience of our users, or to enhance their experiences. It’s no secret that unethical data practices can cause harm, often in ways we can’t predict.

Thoughtful data collection, storage, and use of data is possible, though. Heather Burns brings clarity to the subject by explaining the principles behind the collection, storage, and use of personal data, and how to use those principles to create safer experiences for your users. Understanding Privacy is an essential book for anyone that collects personal information. Jump to table of contents ↓.

  • eBook available for download in October 2022,
  • Printed books will be shipped in November 2022.
  • Pre-order the book.
About The Book

Understanding Privacy is an introduction to the beliefs, concepts, and ideas that inform privacy as it exists — or has failed to exist — on the open web that we build. It’s about all the fundamental values of privacy as a concept, which precede privacy as a legal compliance issue. It’s about the ways these concepts impact your work as a designer, a developer, or a project manager. And it’s about the ways you can adopt these principles to create a healthy, user-centric approach to privacy in everything you do.

Heather explains what she has experienced working on privacy from every angle — human rights, law, policy, and web development — in the simplest way possible, and in the most positive way possible, in ways you can comprehend, use, and adapt in your work on the web right away.

A healthy approach to user privacy doesn’t tell you how to code. It tells you how to make the right decisions which inform the code. It also gives you the foundation you need to question, and even challenge, workplace practices which might not be in your users’ best interests.

This book is not a legal reference manual. By the end of this book, you will have shifted your understanding from a negative view of privacy as a scary legal compliance obligation to a positive view of privacy as an opportunity to build a better web.

Approx. 350 pages. Written by Heather Burns. Cover design by Espen Brunborg. eBook available for download in October, print shipping in November.

You’ll learn:

  • Fundamental concepts, definitions, and frameworks behind privacy and data protection,
  • how to integrate a healthy approach to user privacy into everything you do,
  • common privacy issues and how you can make a difference,
  • how to lay the ground for future developers, designers, and project managers to build a better web for tomorrow,
  • the obligations we have to safeguard user privacy and health data.

Who is this book for?

Understanding Privacy is for designers, developers, and project managers who want to understand what privacy really is about and who want to integrate a healthy approach to user privacy into everything they do — not only to put their users first today but also to help build a better web for tomorrow.

Table Of Contents
1. Privacy and You
+

In the book’s first section, “Privacy and You,” Heather reviews the fundamental concepts, definitions, and frameworks behind privacy and data protection.

2. Privacy and Your Work
+

In the second section, “Privacy and Your Work,” Heather discusses how to integrate a healthy approach to user privacy into everything you do, whether you are a designer, a developer, or a project manager.

3. Privacy and Your Users
+

“Privacy and Your Users” covers issues around user privacy where you can make a difference.

4. Privacy and Your Future
+

In “Privacy and Your Future,” Heather suggests a few critical areas that make the web a better place and lay the ground for future developers, designers, and project managers to build a better web for tomorrow’s users.

Postscript: Privacy and Health Data
+

In the final section, “Privacy and Health Data,” Heather addresses an even more pressing recent issue: the obligations we have to safeguard user privacy and health data, and how to do it as best we can.

Approx. 350 pages. eBook available for download in October, print shipping in November. Written by Heather Burns. Cover design by Espen Brunborg.

About the Author

Heather Burns is a tech policy and regulation specialist. She advocates for an open web built around international standards of human rights, privacy, accessibility, and freedom of expression. She’s currently also an Internet Society Mid-Career Fellow.

Technical Details
  • ISBN: 978-3-945749-64-7 (print)
  • Quality hardcover, stitched binding, ribbon page marker.
  • Free worldwide airmail shipping from Germany starting in November 2022.
  • eBook available for download in October 2022 as PDF, ePUB, and Amazon Kindle.
  • Pre-order the book.
Community Matters ❤️

Producing a book takes quite a bit of time, and we couldn’t pull it off without the support of our wonderful community. A huge shout-out to Smashing Members for the kind, ongoing support. The eBook is and always will be free for Smashing Members as soon as it’s out. Plus, Members get a friendly discount when purchasing their printed copy. Just sayin’! ;-)

More Smashing Books & Goodies

Promoting best practices and providing you with practical tips to master your daily coding and design challenges has always been (and will be) at the core of everything we do at Smashing.

In the past few years, we were very lucky to have worked together with some talented, caring people from the web community to publish their wealth of experience as printed books that stand the test of time. Steven and Stefan are two of these people. Have you checked out their books already?

Touch Design for Mobile Interfaces

Learn how touchscreen devices really work — and how people really use them.

Add to cart $44

TypeScript In 50 Lessons

Everything you need to know about TypeScript, its type system, generics and its benefits.

Add to cart $44

Interface Design Checklists (PDF)

100 practical cards for common interface design challenges.

Add to cart $15

Meet Touch Design For Mobile Interfaces, A New Smashing Book By Steven Hoober

Mobile and touch are the new normal for computing, but there remain a lot of myths, rumors, errors, bias, and out-of-date information on how portable touchscreens are used. Let’s change that!

In our brand-new book Touch Design for Mobile Interfaces, Steven Hoober shares his in-depth research about designing for touch as well as tips, tricks, trends, tendencies, guidelines, and heuristics you can apply to your work immediately to create human-centered mobile interfaces. Jump to table of contents.

About The Book

There are over two billion portable touchscreen devices in use today, and hundreds of millions more installed in cars and kiosks. Sales of traditional mouse-and-keyboard computers have been falling for years, replaced by mobile phones and tablets.

Conventional computers now sport touchscreens and otherwise blur the lines between device types – and between mobile and desktop operating systems. Mobile and touch are the new computing normal, but there is a lot of myth, rumor, error, bias, and out-of-date information on how portable touchscreens are used.

Touch Design for Mobile Interfaces presents and shares real information on hardware, people, interactions, and environments. Steven Hoober has studied how people really touch and hold phones and tablets, as well as seeing it firsthand over twenty years designing products for mobile phones, tablets, kiosks, and computers.

As well as Steven’s in-depth research, the book includes tips, tricks, trends, tendencies, guidelines, and heuristics you can apply to your own designs immediately.

400 pages. Written by Steven Hoober. Cover design by Espen Brunborg. Shipping starting late-December.

Meet our new book “Touch Design for Mobile Interfaces”.

You’ll learn:

  • The history of touch and how it’s influencing traditional computing platforms still today,
  • how touch intersects with human behavior and impacts your design work,
  • how people really hold and touch,
  • how your designs can take into account the ways people adapt their touch to perform different actions,
  • how to overcome problems of visibility and interactivity,
  • how to avoid catastrophes when mistaken taps are made,
  • how to consider likely problems when planning the design of your app or website,
  • how to design UIs that attract the eye, afford action, and inspire confidence,
  • how human vision is not what it appears to be,
  • how to create well-organized, usable templates for touchscreen design,
  • the pros and cons of some of the most important page design elements (e.g., menus, lists, floating bars, tabs).
A sneak-peek inside the book. Large view.

Who is this book for?

This book is for digital-first designers working on mobile or touchscreen products. If you want to design better for mobile, or you need data to back up your decisions, this book is evidence-based, specific, and full of actionable information. If you want to move from desktop design to mobile, the book provides a path for you to reconsider design decisions for touch and mobility.

There are benefits too for product designers, managers, and analysts, as well as developers and engineers on mobile touchscreen products. You’ll be able to plan for the new touch-also world, write better stories and features, and understand how the work environment has moved from predictable computers in cubicles to devices everywhere, anywhere, and anytime.

Table Of Contents

How do people really use their mobile devices? And how can we design better mobile interfaces based on that knowledge?

The 13 chapters of our shiny new book explore just that.

1. Defining Mobile Devices
+

The first chapter describes different devices in the context of their unique attributes of portability, connectivity, and awareness. We’ll come to understand how important it is to understand mobile technology and use patterns, and become aware that mobile paradigms are influencing more traditional computing platforms.

2. The History and Technology of Touch
+

Chapter 2 reviews the evolution of direct screen interaction dating back to the 1950s, and the development of commercialized touch since the 1980s. Today’s devices can be better understood by learning how touch technology advanced before achieving ubiquity through capacitive touch.

3. Capacitive Touch
+

Chapter 3 addresses how capacitive touch intersects with human behavior and impacts our design work.

4. Standards, Assumptions, and Problems
+

We’ll learn how various standards, assumptions, and problems can be problematic for designers of today’s mobile touchscreens. The specifications, norms, and principles of earlier times are sometimes not to be trusted as they are too often based on technological assumptions that no longer apply.

5. Finding Out How People Hold and Touch
+

Chapter 5 covers the observational research Stevn Hoober conducted to discover how people actually manipulate their mobile phones and tablets in everyday use. Through debunking some widely accepted but incorrect assumptions, we’ll learn most of all to change the way we think about designing for touch, because while there are many ways to hold a device, everyone uses them all, constantly shifting from one to another.

6. Touch Accuracy and the Center-Out Preference
+

To understand touchscreen performance, Steven undertook several studies and found that popular notions of touch accuracy and preferred touch regions are wrong. He discusses this in chapter 6 and shows that people favor the middle of the screen for both reading and touching.

7. How Fingers Get In the Way
+

Every mobile device user has experienced how fingers get in the way, and in chapter 7, you’ll learn how our designs can take into account the ways people adapt their touch to perform different actions like tapping and scrolling, and to overcome problems of visibility and interactivity.

8. Imprecision and Probability
+

Chapter 8 covers the issues around imprecision and probability and shows how we need to design systems, interactions, and processes that prevent mistakes — especially avoiding catastrophe when mistaken taps are made.

9. Phones Are Not Flat
+

Mobile devices are used in all kinds of locations and people handle them constantly. People and their environments can be confusing, confounding, and unpredictable. Chapter 9 describes ways we can consider likely problems when planning the design of our apps and websites.

10. People Only Touch What They See
+

We start to move into tactics — with a little less theory, data, research, and background info. Chapter 10 covers best practices in how the UIs of interactive elements are designed to attract the eye, afford action, be readable, and inspire confidence that they can be safely tapped.

11. 1, 2, 3: Designing by Zones
+

In chapter 11, Steven introduces the concept of information design, describes how human vision is not what it appears to be, and then turns all that we’ve learned so far into a simple formula we can all use to create well-organized, usable templates for touchscreen design.

12. Progressive Disclosure
+

Shifting from template theory to template creation practice, in Chapter 12, we’ll review the pros and cons of some of the most important page design elements, such as menus, lists, floating bars, and tabs, to see how they can integrate with the concept of information design for center-out touchscreen products.

13. Practical Mobile Touchscreen Design
+

We’ll finish off by skimming lightly over more or less the entire process of designing digital touchscreen products, from teams to strategy and onward. From these resources we can start building a reference library of how to pursue each aspect of the design process.

400 pages. The eBook is available right away (PDF, ePUB, Amazon Kindle). Shipping starting late-December. Written by Steven Hoober. Designed by Espen Brunborg.

About the Author

Steven Hoober shifted focus from graphic design to mobile UX in 1999. Since then, he designed the first Google mobile search, the first mobile app store, several mobile browsers, and numerous websites and apps for global brands. See more of Steven’s research at 4ourthmobile.com.

Reviews and Testimonials
“Eye opening and practical, but above all, useful. Steven synthesizes his extensive field observations with a deep technical understanding of touch usage and history. This book balances pragmatic guidelines and theory in a way that’s accessible, memorable, and highly referenceable. I now observe phone usage completely differently, but in a way that seems completely obvious in retrospect.”

Lucas Roe, Design Lead, Vertex
“We live in a world of touch devices, and even those that don’t have user interfaces are sure to be activated with touch. Reading Steven’s book feels like you are taking a grand tour, full of wisdom and practical advice – and what to look for when designing and developing a real-world experience. And mind you, this book is not just for the creatives. If you are in the C-suite, do yourself a favor and read. It will boost your strategy to bring a good experience to your customers.”

Mudassir Azeemi, Design systems, Ring Central
Technical Details Community Matters ❤️

Producing a book takes quite a bit of time, and we couldn’t pull it off without the support of our wonderful community. A huge shout-out to Smashing Members for the kind, ongoing support. The eBook is and always will be free for Smashing Members. Plus, Members get a friendly discount when purchasing their printed copy. Just sayin’! ;-)

Stay smashing, and thank you for your ongoing support, everyone!

More Smashing Books & Goodies

Promoting best practices and providing you with practical tips to master your daily coding and design challenges has always been (and will be) at the core of everything we do at Smashing.

In the past few years, we were very lucky to have worked together with some talented, caring people from the web community to publish their wealth of experience as printed books that stand the test of time. Stefan and Adam are some of these people. Have you checked out their books already?

TypeScript In 50 Lessons

Everything you need to know about TypeScript, its type system, generics and its benefits.

Add to cart $44

Interface Design Checklists (PDF)

100 practical cards for common interface design challenges.

Add to cart $15

Form Design Patterns

A practical guide to designing and coding simple and inclusive forms.

Add to cart $44

Creativity In A World Of Technology: Does It Exist?

Technology has done our world wonders: from advancements in medicine, travel, communication, and not to mention our own day-to-day lives. There’s no doubt that it has “transformed human experience” by impacting the way our society functions, as well as how we interact with one another and ourselves. But is this actually a good thing?

By completely embracing technology as a part of our everyday lives, are we inadvertently impacting our ability to create and be creative — without the help of a screen? While some argue that as the world continues to advance, so do our creative pursuits. With so much being replaced and repurposed by technology, it nonetheless seems appropriate to question: how exactly is technology impacting creativity?

Defining Creativity

Before we go deeper into discussing the relationship between technology and creativity, it’s important to define terms. Alexander Rauser, CEO of Prototype, a digital strategy agency, defined that creativity “come[s] from observing the world, interpreting it and bringing us new concepts and ideas,” while technology has become a new lens through which “to see the world differently [and] access information...”. Creativity helps us to explore new paths, imagine new possibilities, and pursue new careers. Without creativity, I would not be a writer, and designers would probably not exist. Movies, TV shows, music; everything we love and enjoy, would have little engagement. The world would probably be quite dull and boring.

When we really take a look at what we surround ourselves with, I think we’d be hard-pressed to find something that doesn't have a creative element to it. I suppose, it is inside this tension, where the challenge begins to set in. Given the ambiguous nature of creativity, a blanket statement of ‘creativity no longer exists’ is a very hard call to make. Creativity is not just one thing, but instead, is many.

As such, when we discuss the existence of creativity in a world immersed in technology, it’s incredibly important to define what aspects of creativity are being impacted and why. Are we discussing childhood creativity? Innovation creativity? Web design creativity? Each has its own set of parameters, influences, and complications when it comes to technology.

A study for the International Forum of Educational Technology & Society argued that in order to understand creativity as a complex phenomenon, we need to:

“...abandon the view of creativity, in which the person is at the center of everything, for a model in which the person is part of a system of mutual influences and information.”

International Forum of Educational Technology & Society

It’s almost as though we need to change the question of whether or not creativity still exists, to “where does it exist, and who or what is it now coming from?”

Can Creativity And Technology Work Together?

The simple answer to this is yes. Creativity and technology do work together and are not mutually exclusive. Instead of suppressing creativity, technology has the ability to enhance specific areas of the creative process, by presenting a new platform for creativity to exist on (and come from). Through the advancement of technology, ideas (which may have once existed within our minds) can now be set free and come to life in the physical world. We now have the necessary tools for greater possibilities and more innovative solutions.

Technology has inspired new careers, as well as creations. In the last few decades, the amount of new industries that have blossomed to life is incredible. By taking a closer look at web design, it’s obvious that as technology rose, a new breed of designers emerged from the dark — planning to take over the Internet and help it thrive.

Espen Brunborg, Head of Design at Primate, wondered in an article for Smashing Magazine, if the Internet is, in fact, killing web design creativity, as there is an element of creative disruption occurring due to the convenience of automated grids and patterns. And while this undoubtedly has merit, there’s no denying how far web design has progressed and transformed because of technology. In such a short amount of time, web design has transversed from the first website in 1991 to the emergence of the term ‘User Experience’ in 1995, to the creation of Google in 1998, to Youtube in 2005, and now the uprising in social media giants like Instagram.

Nowadays, websites are more than just a page of information; they have become an experience. A character through which to understand a business and its values. As designers began experimenting more with animations, colors, parallax layouts, content creation, and even e-commerce features, such as one-click checkouts and paycheck scanners, this only enhanced the experience for users, inviting a rapid growth in website traffic. Cindy Moore, Director of Development for MTS, wrote that “designing websites requires the ability to brainstorm creatively, work with color theory, and appeal to users based on their wants, needs, and personal preference”.

Advancements in technology have, arguably, forced designers to become more creative as they have had to adapt to the growing climate of personal devices. Over 50.44% of web page views are accounted for by mobile devices, which means designers need to make sure that websites are user friendly across a wide range of platforms. Techniques such as responsive web design were thus created. It introduced new thought patterns and ideas on how to make websites more engaging for users, by highlighting the importance of fluid grids and flexible images.

A research paper written by Nathalie Bonnardel, a researcher at the University of Marseille, and Franck Zenasni, a professor at the University of Paris, investigating the impact of technology on creative design, argued that “new technologies and, especially, new CAD systems may help designers to easily express their creativity as well as to assess their ideas or solutions.”

How Has Technology Impacted Business Creativity?

It’s easy to see, then, how the business world has benefited from the creativity and technology dynamic. Businesses now have the opportunity to promote themselves more creatively over a myriad of platforms and mediums, whether that’s through websites, film advertisements, social media or radio, while addressing a wider range of audiences. This has ultimately contributed greatly to the constant exposure to online content, helping businesses to keep up-to-date with their competition, research the needs of consumers, and re-imagine content to suit their needs.

Amongst all of this, the most interesting phenomenon that stands out to me is how it can be flipped the other way. Because this all sounds amazing, right? How, then, could technology negatively impact the way we create, when it affords all these amazing possibilities?

The Complication Dynamic

Ultimately, everything has a push and a pull; a light side and a dark side. For instance, petrol cars are wonderful for transport, yet not so great for the environment; money can be an incredibly beneficial source but can ruin the lives of so many. While technology and creativity may be compatible in some areas, when we begin to look more closely, it’s easy to spot some of the drawbacks — particularly when it comes to reliance, originality, and human development. A simple and clear example, for instance, is the calculator: many of us rely so heavily on automated calculations nowadays, rather than taking the time to figure it out for ourselves.

Maybe the problem is that now it’s just all too easy. We no longer have to think of content, it’s merely right in front of us. Why bother spending hours trying to develop and nurture our creativity when it’s delivered to us on a silver platter? Given what Espen Brunborg said about how our increasing dependence on machines is ultimately going to be detrimental to our creative practices, we must ask ourselves:

Are we really in control of technology, or has it taken control of us?

The scary thing is, I don't think we have truly seen the peak of this dynamic. What happens to creativity when the generation who has been constantly surrounded by devices since the day they were born, grows up?

Our children are undoubtedly spending more time on screens, whether they’re at home, at school, or with friends, and with “devices becoming a fabric of their lives,” they are consequently lessening the opportunities for them to come up with their own creations. We are so willing to give over our power to these devices, that it may come to a point where creativity “may be harder to find in older children and adults because their creative potential has been suppressed by a society that encourages intellectual conformity.”

Moreover, the best ideas and inspirations often come to us when we are otherwise occupied, such as washing the dishes, going for a walk, staring at the clouds, or being in nature. Our minds simultaneously go blank and become clear — as if waiting for ideas to flood in and take over. Daydreaming is such a subconscious yet fulfilling experience we all unwittingly partake in.

A recent study, written by the Department of Psychology at the University of British Columbia, determined that daydreaming is actually paramount to boosting our creativity. However, with our constant exposure to technology, we are lessening the likelihood of this boosting occurring. While we can sit and mindlessly watch TV, we are constantly fixated upon a screen, restricting any time for our minds to wander, empty, and allow space for ideas. Instead, we need to be nurturing our minds. Why not take the time to stare out the window? Leave your phone behind? Aimlessly gaze at the sky for an hour? You’d be surprised by how much creativity you can inspire when you’re not otherwise occupied by technology.

Where Does The Balance Need To Be?

In the long run, where does this leave us? Have the robots already taken over, as Espen Brunborg suggests, or is there a way to find a medium between technology and human creativity? I think so. While technology is a part of our lives, it is not our life entirely. I think sometimes we forget there is a world beyond our phones, or computers, or the content we see on TV.

Finding A World Beyond Technology

We have already proven that humanity and technology can co-exist. Now it is simply a matter of re-adjusting the scales to make sure that creativity is nurtured and not deterred by either humans or technology. Rather, it is simply influenced. The best way to shift, refocus, and find a balance, is to come back to the physical world — even if for just a moment. At the heart of it, the balance needs to come from within us. Technology is only going to continue to advance, and we, as a society, must find ways to harness its potential while keeping it from hindering our own.

A case study written by Linda Miksch and Charlotte Schulz of Lund University, investigating the phenomenon of a digital detox as a reaction to technology overload, states the following:

“Due to an abuse of digital devices ... and the resulting constant availability and accessibility, the importance of finding a balance in connectivity ... grows.”

Disconnect to Reconnect: The Phenomenon of Digital Detox as a Reaction to Technology Overload

Miksch and Schulz go further as to explain specific actions we can take to limit our digital usage. These include establishing barriers around when, where, and how long we use our devices, creating awareness and living in the moment, and re-discovering the importance of offline activities and mediums. They conclude that while the use of technology itself can become habitual, so too can the implementation of daily actions “to lessen technology usage”. This simply highlights that there is a way to come back.

In fact, the documentary The Social Dilemma, directed by Jeff Orlowski, discusses the powerful impact of simply turning off the notifications on your phone. Think about it; the moment our phones ‘bing’ we jump; we see banners appear on our home screen and get a sudden rush of endorphins. It’s almost like that part of our brains attached to technology, never truly switches off. We are always on alert for the next message, next event, next piece of news. Instead, try turning your notifications off, or putting your phone on ‘Do Not Disturb’. You may even like to only turn off the notifications for a particular app, like Facebook or Instagram. Once you become accustomed to it, it’s astonishing how little you think about your phone, when the anticipation of a message is suddenly removed. Not only can switching off your notifications help you connect with the outside world, but it can also help to build a more harmonious relationship with your phone.

Recommended reading: Are Websites Adding To Consumer’s Health Issues?

Another way to reconnect with the world is, of course, to be in it and around it. Daily walks and exercise are a wonderful way to remove yourself from technology, breathe in nature, and open your mind. There is something so unexplainably calming about walking through a park lined with trees, gazing up, and seeing them softly sway in the wind. It’s almost like an instant sense of feeling grounded; a reminder that everything is okay. Perhaps it’s because nature is so far removed from technology that it shows us there is still life that exists without it. Even just half an hour a day, especially after being in front of a screen for hours at a time, can sometimes be all you need to reset, rebalance, and keep going. In the long run, a daily walk around a neighborhood can not only impact our creativity and imagination but further our mental and physical health and well-being. The good news is, it doesn’t stop here. There are so many actionable changes you can make to nurture the world beyond technology, and by extension our creativity, including meditation and yoga, keeping a journal, or reading.

The question is, how will you do it? Will you embark on a digital detox and go completely offline? Will you be conscious of putting your phone away when spending time with friends? Will you endeavor to find joy and purpose outside of a screen? The actions you choose to take, no matter their scale, will only help us to come back to a space of equilibrium and balance, changing the relationship between creativity and technology for the better. Because in the end, the key to the survival of our creativity starts with us.

Further Reading on SmashingMag: