[sacate] Re: lawsuit over screen readers

  • From: "Londa Peterson" <lpeterson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <sacate@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 5 Oct 2007 08:57:10 -0400

The strange thing about this is that I think Target is already making
necessary changes.  The first time I went to their site, i couldn't actually
make a purchase.  I have tried it since, and it works.  I'm not sure this
suit is really necessary anymore.

-----Original Message-----
From: sacate-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:sacate-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On
Behalf Of wes britton
Sent: Thursday, October 04, 2007 4:41 PM
To: sacate@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [sacate] lawsuit over screen readers





Lawsuit seeks to improve Web access for the blind



A ruling by a federal judge in San Francisco could mean that businesses

and government agencies would have to make their Web sites accessible to

the blind, something disability rights advocates say is vital as the

routine transactions of everyday life take place increasingly on the

Internet.



U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel granted class-action status Tuesday

to a lawsuit alleging that Target Corp. is in violation of California and

federal laws because its Web site doesn't work with screen-reading

software, essentially making the site unusable for blind people.



To comply, Target would have to tag product images on its site with word

descriptions, allowing the software to "read" those images aloud.



Many retailers, including Wal-Mart Inc. and Amazon.com, have upgraded

their Web sites or are in the process of doing so, said John Pare,

executive director for strategic initiatives for the National Federation

of the Blind. Most companies have done so voluntarily, he said, in

response to concerns raised by the 50,000-member foundation.





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