[infoshare] Re: Fwd: Re: New Kindle Additional Comments

  • From: "Lynne" <superlynne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <infoshare@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 1 Oct 2011 09:12:52 -0400

sigh Yes, it is very discouraging. Regrettably, it's what Gus and I thought.
Lynne
----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ellen Rubin 
  To: infoshare@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Friday, September 30, 2011 10:01 PM
  Subject: [infoshare] Fwd: Re: New Kindle Additional Comments


  Discourag
  ing info re Kindle. Read on:




    From: Greg Kearney <gkearney@xxxxxxxxx>
    Date: Sat, 01 Oct 2011 09:34:17 +0800

    This really isn't a matter of suggestions Amazon has been turning off 
accessibility at the demand of the Author's Guild in the United States. They 
have made a deliberate decision to do this. Books used to be some what 
accessible, the Kindle interface has never had full accessibly like the iPad 
does, are now not accessible at all.

    The Author's Guild got what they wanted and never had to even go to court 
to get it. The odd thing in all of this is that Apple's iBooks product is fully 
accessible and the Author's Guild never said word one about it. My bet is that 
that Apple called their bluff and told them they would see them in court over 
it and the Author's Guild back down.

    In any event Amazon has proven by their acts and by their words to have 
little interest in this matter. They say that they will fix it yet every 
product they release has less and less accessibility in it and they turn off 
what little they do have. What conclusions ware we supposed to be reaching 
given their actions thus far?

    Gregory Kearney | Manager Accessible Media
    Association for the Blind of WA - Guide Dogs WA
    PO Box 101, Victoria Park WA 6979 | 61 Kitchener Ave, Victoria Park WA 6100
    Tel: 08 9311 8246 | Fax: 08 9361 8696 | www.guidedogswa.com.au
    Tel: 307-224-4022 (North America)
    Email: greg.kearney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
    Email: gkearney@xxxxxxxxx 





    No it is not accessible. It is as it Amazon has go out of it's way to make 
their products inaccessible. In the case of Mac and the iOS it is quite 
literally true that you have to say to yourself as a developer, "how do I 
deactivate the built in accessibility".

          I spoke with an Amazon employee who told me there is no interest in 
accessibility at Amazon as the market is seen as too small and not worth the 
trouble they encountered with the Author's Guild in the United States. We 
should not expect any effort by Amazon in the future to address the issue of 
accessibility. So unless someone in the U.S can figure out how to make devices 
and services fall under the ADA my guess would be that they will never address 
this issue. Even if that mean walking away from the U.S. education market. 


          If you want an accessible book reader your best                  bet 
is an iPad, iPhone or a dedicated DAISY device it would seem.


          Gregory Kearney | Manager Accessible Media

          Association for the Blind of WA - Guide Dogs WA

          PO Box 101, Victoria Park WA 6979 | 61 Kitchener Ave, Victoria Park 
WA 6100

          Tel: 08 9311 8246 | Fax: 08 9361 8696 | www.guidedogswa.com.au

          Tel: 307-224-4022 (North America)

          Email: greg.kearney@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

          Email: gkearney@xxxxxxxxx 

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