[access-uk] Gov asks disabled users how it can make web easier • The Register

  • From: Gordon Keen <gordonkeen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Wed, 30 Nov 2011 15:43:30 +0000

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/11/30/goc_seeks_views_on_web_accessibility/

Gov asks disabled users how it can make web easier

The government has asked for views on what problems disabled people face when 
using the web and other technologies and whether laws and regulations should be 
changed to improve accessibility.

A web-based forum has been established to ask users how laws and guidance could 
be improved to enable wider access to information presented online.

The website has been set up by the eAccessibility Forum, a group made up of 
government and industry and voluntary sector bodies which works to improve 
access to technology. The forum reports to the Minister for Culture, Media and 
Sport.

Visitors to the eAccessibility Forum website will be asked to share their 
experiences of using websites and other online services and any difficulties 
they have experienced. They will also be encouraged to tell the Forum how its 
own website can be improved.

Accessibility standards help people with visual, auditory, physical, cognitive 
and neurological disabilities access the web. They can also be useful for older 
web users with accessibility needs.

In the UK websites are legally required to be accessible and usable under 
anti-discrimination laws. The Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI), part of the 
not-for-profit World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), produces international 
guidelines to help web designers and developers better meet these requirements.

Using text alternatives for images and meaningful names for links rather than 
non-descriptive labels such as 'click here' make website navigation easier for 
people using screen-reading technologies, while large or enlargeable text and 
images can make it easier for users with poor sight to read and understand 
content. Accessibility can also be improved by implementing closed caption 
technology on audio content.

The government said that a more accessible website helps providers reduce costs 
and potentially increase business, while enabling more users to access 
information quickly and easily.

The eAccessibility Forum website asks users to comment on how existing laws and 
guidance can be used to help or hinder access to technology and whether any 
changes could be made to improve existing rules. It asks for the specific 
issues disabled users face when using consumer technology, and what more could 
be done to ensure that accessibility is "designed in" to new equipment.

The website also asks users how best to promote accessibility standards, while 
asking for examples of organisations which are already effectively spreading 
the message.

Communications Minister Ed Vaizey said that making the internet more accessible 
would enable everybody to share in its benefits.

"The internet has changed the world but too many people are excluded from the 
digital revolution," he said.

"This new website will allow businesses involved in the forum and government to 
hear directly from users about the problems they have using the internet. I 
urge people to visit the site and tell us what we can do to make the internet 
more accessible for them."

A summary of discussion and feedback from the site would be made available 
quarterly, the government said. It added that it aimed to see a noticeable 
difference in accessibility by the London Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2012.

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