Below is an excellent article about the current state of accessibility in social media.

Chris


---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 12 Apr 2016 14:22:33 +0000
From: Kim Charlson via leadership <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [leadership] Making Social Media More Accessible to the Visually
    Impaired

FYI
Kim

Making Social Media More Accessible to the Visually Impaired


By Michael Andor Brodeur Globe Correspondent  April 11, 2016

Over the last few years, something big has happened to the way we communicate - 
though if you could see it happening, you may not have noticed it.

The proliferation of millions of connected cameras, along with the Internet's 
general tendency toward loosening language have worked in tandem to nudge our 
day-to-day communications ever further away from the textual and ever more 
deeply into the visual. These days, a good portion of our talk takes the form 
of photos, videos, emoji, animated GIFs, and stickers; and in the process, 
social media has converted a significant portion of our social lives into 
consumable content - well, consumable for most of us.

This past week, Facebook made news with its unveiling of "automatic alternative 
text," a technology that follows years of research, and stands to significantly 
enhance the service's accessibility for the visually impaired, as well as the experience 
those users have.

Developed by Matt King, Facebook's first blind engineer, automatic alternative 
text employs artificial intelligence to generate spoken interpretations of 
photos - so, a photo of two friends vacationing on the beach might be described 
through the voice of a screen reader program (like Apple's VoiceOver or 
Microsoft's Narrator) as showing two people, sand, water, and sky. It also 
reads aloud data like date, time, caption text, reactions, and comments. 
(Currently the feature is only available for iOS screen readers set to English, 
but Facebook plans to expand its avaiability across platforms and languages.)

The resulting experience is far richer and offers a deeper understanding (for 
both the visually impaired and Facebook) of what exactly people are posting.

Automatic alternative text arrives as part of a recent wave of advances in accessibility 
for the blind across tech and social media. Just last week, Twitter announced that iOS 
and Android users would now be able to add descriptions (i.e. old-fashioned non-automated 
"alt-text") to any photo posted to the service. These text descriptions can 
extend up to 420 characters (no need to be pithy there), and are detected and read by 
screen reader programs. Twitter also opened up its API to accommodate alt-text 
descriptions through much relied-upon third-party Twitter clients for the visually 
impaired like EasyChirp, Chicken Nugget, and The Qube.

And these are just the beginning. As image and facial recognition capabilities 
grow more and more sophisticated, it's easy to imagine ways that technology can 
go deeper. Microsoft recently launched a research initiative called Seeing AI, 
which aims to use artificial intelligence and a either a smartphone or a pair 
of Pivothead glasses to read everything from the sections of a menu to the 
moods of your co-workers).

Meanwhile, specialized GPS apps like the suite made by Sendero (motto: "It is better 
to travel hopefully than to arrive") and indoor/outdoor navigational apps like 
BlindSquare are turning mobile phones into essential tools for the blind to experience 
life offline.

There's still plenty to be done to make the Internet more accessible to the 
visually impaired. Automatic alt-text hasn't yet been extended to Facebook's 
narcissistic-little-sister-site Instagram, a platform that relies almost 
entirely on images, and remains frustratingly improvisational for the blind. 
And while the similarly image-driven site Tumblr offers the option to enter 
alt-text descriptions for photos, complaints have been common among users for 
years over how its design is often at odds with its accessibility. YouTube has 
made strides for its deaf users by further developing its sometimes reliable 
automatic captioning technology, but it still does not allow for users to 
upload audio descriptions for videos (which would require an extra audio track).

Accessibility isn't just a matter of courtesy, it's becoming a matter of legal contention. There's 
been a surge of recent lawsuits alleging that websites and services that are inaccessible amount to 
violations of Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act. And while it's unlikely that the 
DOJ will offer hard and fast rules about whether websites counts as "public 
accommodations" (the statute was, after all, passed in 1990), the federal government already 
operates its digital communications to be compliant with Section 508, (which requires that 
"individuals with disabilities, who are members of the public seeking information or services 
from a Federal agency, have access to and use of information and data that is comparable to that 
provided to the public who are not individuals with disabilities") by following a strict set 
of guidelines. It could be a forecast of what regulations might emerge in the near future.

Ideally, social media's promise would extend equally to everyone - allowing the 
blind and visually impaired to connect with friends far away, without having to 
rely on friends immediately nearby (a predicament that a Facebook study found 
often deters the visually impaired from participating at all). Until then, 
there are things you can do as a user to make social media more inclusive to 
everybody on your friend list (this toolkit from the feds is a good place to 
start). In the meantime, don't worry, Facebook can't describe how you look in 
that swimsuit - yet.

Michael Andor Brodeur can be reached at 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>. Follow him on Twitter @MBrodeur.





_______________________________________________
ATI (Adaptive Technology Inc.)
A special interest affiliate of the Missouri Council of the Blind
http://moblind.org/membership/affiliates/adaptive_technology

Reply via email to