This is the fear! Digital India  could easily leave us out. 

-----Original Message-----
From: AccessIndia [mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of 
Sruti disAbility Rights Centre
Sent: 05 December 2016 15:49
To: Dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility of mobile phones 
and Tabs.
Subject: [AI] For Millions of Indians with Disabilities making online payments 
is tough call

*http://globalaccessibilitynews.com/2016/11/23/for-millions-of-indians-with-disabilities-making-payments-online-is-tough-call/
<http://globalaccessibilitynews.com/2016/11/23/for-millions-of-indians-with-disabilities-making-payments-online-is-tough-call/>*

*BANGALORE, INDIA:* Booking cabs, buying food and making payments online
seem like they’re just a swipe and a tap away, but for millions of Indians
with disabilities, these apps are not designed for them to use.


According to a study conducted by Centre for Internet and Society (CIS)
last month, many of the most-commonly used mobile apps for food delivery,
online payments, grocery shopping and transportation were not accessible to
people with vision disabilities. The study covered 22 apps.

The 2011 census puts the number of people with disabilities in the country
at 26 million, while advocacy groups say the real figure is closer to 150
million. Last year, India recorded nearly nine billion downloads of
mobile-based applications last year.

“The national policy for universal electronic accessibility says that all
IT products and services should be accessible. However, the government is
still unable to implement it. Several government apps are inaccessible,”
said Nirmita Narasimhan, policy director at CIS. CIS’s survey of some key
government mobile based applications like My Gov, EPathshala and Prime
Minister Narendra Modi’s official app found them to be severely lacking.
The illiterate, aged and those not proficient in English would also
struggle with the apps, the study found. The guidelines for government
websites laid out accessibility standards in 2009. The 2013 national policy
on universal electronic accessibility clearly upholds equal rights
“ensuring that accessibility standards and guidelines and universal design
concepts are adopted and adhered to.”

However, most commonly-used apps fail to follow this. All 22 of the apps
studied were privately owned but not all were fully compliant with
universal standards. Of taxi-hailing apps Meru, Ola and Uber, only Uber was
completely accessible to the disabled. The others had mis-labelled or
unlabeled buttons and graphics.

When it came to food delivery, Zomato was the best at replicating the user
experience for people with disabilities. Swiggy and Foodpanda were
difficult for new users, and Freshmenu was completely inaccessible.

Of the marketplace apps, Amazon and Snapdeal were the only accessible ones.
Myntra and Flipkart had incorrectly labelled buttons and misleading graphic
tags, which made them impossible for people with disabilities to use. For
instance, customers would be able to select the product they wanted to buy
but had no way of choosing the quantity, the study said. Online grocery
delivery apps Grofers and Zop Now were hard for people with disabilities to
use, while Big Basket was relatively better though pages change during
orders. Online payment portals Paytm, Oxigen and FreeCharge were relatively
accessible, the study found.

“Designers, developers and industries need to realize that there are more
people out there who use this technology .The market is much bigger and
they should work towards being inclusive,” said Narasimhan of CIS.

Albinder Dhinda, cofounder of grocery delivery service Grofers, said their
app meets all accessibility requirements. “However, the disability tools
provided by Google Play Store or the App Store often don’t benefit the user
and are hard for them to use. We are trying to make it better. Things like
online payments won’t be accessible to people with disabilities as those
apps are supported by third party sites, and don’t fall within our
settings. We’re trying to make it better. We’re three years behind the US,
in the playground they made. It’ll be a while before we reach their level,”
he said.

Source: Times of India

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