[accesscomp] FW: Mayday! Mayday! Tech IndustryLobbyists Threatening Future of Accessible Television!, Dan's tip for August 7 2014

  • From: "Robert Acosta" <boacosta@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "tektalk discussion" <tektalkdiscussion@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 7 Aug 2014 08:04:19 -0700

                

 

Robert Acosta, President

Helping Hands for the Blind

(818) 998-0044

www.helpinghands4theblind.org

 

From: dan Thompson [mailto:dthompson5@xxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Thursday, August 07, 2014 6:08 AM
To: dan Thompson
Subject: Mayday! Mayday! Tech IndustryLobbyists Threatening Future of
Accessible Television!, Dan's tip for August 7 2014

 


Just in case you have not seen this yet, I am sending it out again.  I have
contacted AFB and even though the article says Augst fifth is the deadline
for submitting comments, they will take them.


Please don't miss this opportunity to shape the future of tech
accessability.


 


 


Mayday! Mayday! Tech IndustryLobbyists Threatening Future of Accessible
Television!


With One Email, Tell Them and the FCC What You Think!


***"This is not a test; this is an actual emergency"***

Dear Advocate:

When we all celebrated the enactment of the historic Twenty-First Century
Communications and Video Accessibility Act (CVAA) almost three years ago, we
were promised by our bipartisan champions on Capitol Hill, by the U.S.
Congress, and the President of the United States, that one day, things would
be significantly different. We were promised that the experience of people
with vision loss in terms of our/their independence and full participation
in American life through the full and fair use of today's most ubiquitous
technologies would be forever changed.

We were thrilled to know that there would be much more video description
available on TV, and indeed today there is. We were gratified to know that
the manufacturers and service providers of some of the most commonly used
communications technologies, such as electronic messaging and mobile phone
web browsing, would no longer be able to ignore the needs of people who are
blind or visually impaired. And we were hopeful that emergency alerts would
finally be meaningful for our community, and it looks like they will be.

But we were also promised, and the new law requires, that TVs and TV-like
equipment would need to be fully accessible to us. Now, in what is
essentially the proverbial eleventh hour in the series of federal regulatory
proceedings implementing the CVAA, the seemingly shameless consumer
electronics lobby is demanding, with implied threats to go to court if they
don't get their way, to strip the CVAA of its TV accessibility obligations
and to violate the vision of a more accessible technology society that the
CVAA represents.

So what do our tech lobbyist "friends" want?

Well, to answer this question, you need to know just a little bit about how
the CVAA works. the CVAA says that your cable or satellite provider needs to
make the equipment, the settop boxes and other such devices they give you to
get their programming, accessible to you upon your request. While this is a
good thing in comparison to how things have been, it is a compromise, and
one that advocates reached with cable and similar providers as a condition
for their willingness to allow the CVAA to become law. So, with regard to
cable and satellite providers, they don't necessarily need to make all, or
even most, of their equipment accessible as a matter of course; they merely
have to accommodate your request for equipment you can use by providing you
with something, even if it is not state-of-the-art.

In contrast, the CVAA requires that TVs and TV-like equipment, essentially
anything that receives or plays back video programming of any kind, a ton of
very cool technology out there, must be accessible by default; TVs and
TV-like equipment will only be allowed to be inaccessible in a given
instance if, and only if, fairly strict legal exceptions apply. This means
that, unlike the cable and satellite sector which may regularly traffic in
inaccessible equipment so long as they can ultimately give us something we
can use upon our request, makers of TVs and TV-like equipment are charged
with the clear responsibility to fundamentally change their behavior in a
way that would exponentially increase the commercial retail availability of
the accessible and most popular video-related consumer electronics on the
market.

Ok, but what are those lobbyists up to?

With fork-tongued craftiness, the consumer electronics lobby is, even as we
speak, assuring the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) of industry's
commitment to the needs of people with disabilities while, without blushing,
propounding some of the most contorted legal reasoning that we have seen
yet. They are using the full weight of their over-indulged influence to
pressure the FCC into applying the inferior, more limited cable and
satellite requirements to TVs and TV-like equipment.

If these "friends" of ours in the tech lobby get their way, rather than
being able to shop for the digital TV or other video player you want and to
have a robust array of choices just like everyone else, you will be forced
to beg for an accessible product directly from the manufacturer. Rather than
being able to enjoy the product you want to buy, you may even be expected to
live with an inferior model, if you can get an accessible inferior model at
all. Why are the tech lobbyists proposing this manifestly unfair
arrangement? quite simply, their scheme would let their client companies off
the hook for doing the right thing but leave consumers with little recourse.


What Can You Do?


Right now, the FCC is accepting comments from the public about how to
implement the CVAA's TV and cable and satellite equipment requirements. AFB
will help you voice your concern if you will take just a moment or two and
write your thoughts in an email to us; AFB will file your comments for you.
No, AFB's name will not be on your comments; your comments will be your own.
We are simply offering to make the process as easy for you as possible
because this issue is so uniquely critical.

The FCC's electronic comment filing system is not the easiest system to use,
and any comments filed need to include certain technical legal references.
Send an email to:

TV@xxxxxxx

We will be glad to add the technical pro forma details for you and to submit
your comments on your behalf for the official record.

So what exactly do you need to do?

All you need to do to help get things back on the right track is the
following:

1: Write an email of whatever length you wish stating in polite but pointed
fashion that begging for an accessible TV or similar equipment directly from
a manufacturer is categorically unacceptable to you. Tell the FCC that it
was the obvious intention of Congress, and it is the expectation of people
who are blind or visually impaired across America, that accessible TVs and
TV-like equipment will be readily and regularly available at commercial
retail stores. Remind the FCC that the so-called "upon request" compromise
that we reached with the cable and satellite industries neither involved the
consumer electronics lobby at the time nor applies to their client companies
now. Tell the FCC that people with vision loss will not stand for the
consumer electronics lobby's proposed gutting of one of the most popular and
important parts of the CVAA. Tell the FCC your own story of frustrations
trying to simply adjust the volume or channels on your equipment, to simply
play a show or movie, to find and activate your TV's video description
controls, and to otherwise make full use of your TV or TV-like equipment.

2: At the conclusion of the text of your email, be absolutely certain to
type your first and last name, followed by your regular mailing address.
When we properly format and file your comments, the FCC needs to know that
you are a real person, and your comments must be accompanied by more than
your email address; they must include a regular identifying mailing address.
It is up to you to decide which of the addresses that you might be
associated with you want to use, a home, work, or some other appropriate
address. So long as your email includes both your full name and a real
related address, your comments will be accepted as part of the official
record. Don't worry about anything else; we will be sure to fill out the
rest of the required information, such as the docket number for this
proceeding and similar formalities.

3: Between now and Monday, August 5, send your email to:

TV@xxxxxxx

and simply begin the text of your email with the greeting, "To whom it may
concern." A simple "Sincerely" or "Respectfully" at the conclusion of your
message and before your full name and address will be fine.

Once we receive your email, we will properly format it and submit it to the
FCC. The deadline for all comments is Wednesday, August 7. However, given
that we hope and expect that we will receive a considerable number of
comments, please send us your email comments no later than Monday, August 5
or as soon as you possibly can.

Thank you in advance for your advocacy, keep hope alive, and please share
this call to action widely.


For further information, contact:


Mark Richert, Esq.
Director, Public Policy, AFB
(202) 469-6833
MRichert@xxxxxxx 

 

 

 

 

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  • » [accesscomp] FW: Mayday! Mayday! Tech IndustryLobbyists Threatening Future of Accessible Television!, Dan's tip for August 7 2014 - Robert Acosta