Hi everyone. I'm a supporter of this resolution. To offer an alternative 
perspective on the discussion, I'd like to paste here the text of an entry I 
posted on my blog at 
http://mosen.org/index.php/nfbs-ios-app-resolution-some-perspective-and-context/
Being a member of a minority is exhausting at times. Ignorance, discrimination 
(both inadvertent and deliberate), and barriers preventing us from realising 
our full potential are problems we encounter regularly. These issues aren't 
unique to blind people, or even to disabled people. I'm mindful as I write this 
of the recent 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act in the United States. 
It's a significant piece of legislation. It required bravery on the part of the 
legislators who passed it. Its principles met with considerable resistance, 
some of it violent.
This post is a long one, because I believe the issues of self-advocacy, 
collective advocacy, what is worth fighting for and what is not, are all 
important to our sense of self-perception and our expectations of what 
constitutes our rightful place in society.
I'd like to illustrate both the challenges and potential of advocacy by 
recalling a few issues on which I've worked over the years, remind you of the 
advocacy of other minorities, then take a look at the National Federation of 
the Blind's resolution on the accessibility of iOS apps in that context.
Maybe before you took time out to read this post, you spent some time today 
reading a book. Perhaps it came from Bookshare, or a special format library. We 
now have access to eBooks, and it's worth noting that access to the Kindle app 
was achieved after considerable collective advocacy efforts. Nevertheless, 
special format libraries and repositories continue to play an important part in 
blind people exercising our right to read. It wasn't always this easy for 
special format organisations to get their material to you.
In 1994, as the Manager of Government Relations for the organisation then known 
as the Royal New Zealand Foundation for the Blind, I oversaw a campaign of 
advocacy which took advantage of New Zealand's Copyright Act being rewritten. 
We believed that if an author published a book, it was being published for all 
the people to access. The status quo at that time was that if the special 
format library in New Zealand, and for that matter most other countries, wanted 
to make a book available in Braille or on talking book, they had to write a 
letter to the copyright holder asking for their permission. Sometimes, those 
letters would sit on someone's desk for months and months. Eventually, the 
library would get a reply. Most of the time the reply said "yes", sometimes the 
request was declined, meaning blind people were deprived of access to that book.
It seemed wrong to me that the process of making the book available in a 
special format, which is time-consuming in itself, was delayed by the need to 
seek permission. It was absolutely abhorrent to me that publishers felt they 
had the right to say "no".
We began an advocacy campaign asking for a clause to be added to the Copyright 
Act giving blanket permission for recognised organisations for people with 
print disabilities to make books available in special formats, without having 
to seek the permission of the copyright holder first.
The response of the publishers was ferocious. They blasted me, and the 
campaign, for a culture of entitlement. Worse, they called me a thief. One day, 
I got a call from the representative of publishers who said, "so tell me, do 
you steal from everyone, or just from publishers"?
There's no doubt we'd got the publishers angry. But we calmly made our case to 
the people who mattered, legislators. We pointed out that the publishers 
weren't being required to pay for their material to be made available in 
special formats, that access to the printed word was just as important as 
access to the built environment. The legislators agreed, and the law was 
passed. It was ground-breaking, and in subsequent years I was approached by a 
number of organisations in multiple countries, including the United States, 
about how we concluded that advocacy effort successfully and how they might go 
about doing something similar.
Ultimately, that concept has now been enshrined in an international treaty. 
Something considered by some to be radical, over-reaching, exhibiting 
entitlement just 20 years ago is now considered sound public policy, even by 
the publishers.
Not long after that campaign was concluded successfully, I was being asked to 
front up on a range of current affairs shows over my campaign to repeal the law 
which arguably prohibited any blind person from serving on any jury. I debated 
the issue on radio with our Minister of Justice, who was staunchly opposed to 
any change in the law. In the most exciting of these appearances, I was 
debating one of New Zealand's top criminal lawyers, who was both patronising 
and adamant on the subject. Sight, he said, was essential to serve on any jury. 
I put my case politely but forcefully.
Afterwards, the talk shows were full of it. There were a good number of people 
who talked about political correctness gone mad, asking why the Foundation was 
paying big money for this clown to alienate people, saying they'd never donate 
to the Foundation again. No matter how psychologically prepared you are for the 
onslaught, it's not easy being in the centre of that kind of firestorm.
However, legislators were watching. Enough had been persuaded by the logic of 
my argument that the law was changed. Now it's totally a non-issue.
I could fill screens and screens with examples like this - examples of taking 
advocacy stances that were right, but unpopular.
All the vitriol I went through is totally insignificant compared with what 
racial minorities, such as blacks in the US, went through to secure their right 
to equality. There was no shortage of people who said, "if we don't want to 
serve blacks, that's our right. If we don't want blacks at our school, that's 
our right". If brave, great civil rights leaders had listened to those who were 
worried about how many white people civil rights campaigns were offending, what 
a much less equal world we'd have. Sometimes, you have to take a stand knowing 
it will offend. That's not to say you deliberately seek to offend. One is 
better respected, and furthers one's cause, when one is resolute but courteous.
In the context of the resolution passed by NFB over the weekend asking that 
Apple require all iOS apps to be accessible, it really saddens me to see the 
number of young people on social networks, enjoying entitlements very hard 
fought for, slamming what they perceive to be the culture of entitlement 
pervasive in the resolution. Ironic, and sad.
People seem to forget that in 2008, we only had access to iTunes, at least in 
Windows, thanks to the diligence of one man, Brian Hartgen. I seem to recall a 
lot of people complaining extremely vociferously about the cost he was charging 
to get some recompense for the hours and hours it took to make that dog's 
breakfast of an app useable.
Then, as Apple embarked on iTunes U, and educational institutions began 
adopting it, iTunes became subject to federal law. The NFB of Massachusetts 
sued Apple, and also put pressure on universities not to use iTunes U until 
iTunes was fully accessible. NFB won that suit. Now, blind people with a range 
of screen readers benefit daily from that advocacy, which some people 
criticised at the time.
Can we express gratitude and request change at the same time? Yes of course we 
can. NFB gave Apple an award in 2010 for the remarkable, life-changing 
introduction of VoiceOver to iOS. But we are customers. The money we pay for an 
iPhone or iPad is no less of value than the money a sighted person pays. We're 
perfectly entitled to strive for access to as many apps as we can get.
Since the resolution was published ahead of the debate, a move for which I 
thank NFB as the debate was interesting, people have asked why Apple is being 
singled out. I think the reasons for that are twofold.
First, more blind smartphone users are using iOS than any other platform, by 
virtue of how well Apple has done. Apple can and should be proud of that.
Second and most significantly, no other app repository imposes as many criteria 
on app developers. Apps are rejected from the App Store for a bunch of reasons. 
Apple can decide the app adds no particular value. They can reject it for 
security reasons. They can decide the app is in bad taste, or not 
family-friendly enough. Those of us who've been around a while may remember all 
the hassles Google had getting the Google Voice app into the App Store.
So then the question is, why shouldn't accessibility be of greater concern?
Some have said that the resolution's scope is totally unrealistic. They say 
that calling for all apps to be accessible is just a nonsense. It can't be 
done, and it would be hard to police even if it could.
Let me take the first part first. It can't be done? Yes, I agree with that. It 
can't. There are some apps so visual in nature and purpose that you're never 
going to make them accessible. If that's the case, why do I support the 
resolution? I support it, because it's important to understand how advocacy 
works. You go into a negotiation with your very best case scenario on display. 
In an ideal world, we'd like all apps to be accessible. I have no inside 
information, but I have concluded many successful advocacy campaigns, and I 
have no doubt that NFB will already be clear about where they'd be prepared to 
give ground. If Apple comes to the table, their starting position is likely to 
be that whether a third-party app is accessible or not is a matter for the 
developer in question, not Apple. Apple may well also have a compromise 
position of some kind in mind. It's an absolutely standard negotiating position.
Second, how practical is the resolution, given that there are approximately 1.5 
million apps in the Store? There are plenty of automated testing tools in use 
in IT companies. They can certainly test for textual labels on buttons, 
although I agree it would have to be a clever testing tool to try and ascertain 
whether the text was helpful. Tricky, but Apple has some of the best software 
engineers in the world.
I can remember some years ago when web accessibility campaigns were in their 
infancy. Many people were complaining then about how unnecessary and 
politically correct web accessibility was because they just knew blind people 
would never go to their website anyway. Then, DreamWeaver, a popular web 
authoring tool, added warnings when developers tried to save a page that 
contained links or graphics without ALT text. A warning would pop up telling 
the developer that it looked like they were about to create an inaccessible 
page, and did they really want to do that. Adding a similar warning to Apple's 
developer tools could make a huge difference.
It's true that automated testing tools and warnings when developers create an 
app are not a panacea. Perhaps some additional blind people might be employed 
to further Apple's efforts here. And if a few more of the capable, tech-savvy 
blind people I know who are struggling to find work could get those jobs, I'm 
all for that.
Some people have said how sad it is that NFB is showing such ingratitude, that 
they're alienating developers, the very people we need to have on-side. As you 
may know, I set up a company earlier this year, Appcessible, where a bunch of 
blind people help app developers with accessibility. It's rewarding work, and I 
find it satisfying because if I see a problem, I always try to find a 
constructive way of being part of the solution. But no matter how hard we at 
Appcessible try, how hard you try as an individual who contacts a developer, 
it's a humungous task. You'll have successes, and you'll have set-backs, but 
there's a wider principle to be defended here.
The status quo is that app developers can say, "if we don't wish to accommodate 
blind people, that's our right". Sound familiar? It should do. It's a similar 
argument to that used against blacks in 1964.
Deaf people have been criticised for their efforts to have every single movie 
captioned on Netflix. Wheelchair users were criticised for getting legislation 
passed requiring all public buildings to be physically accessible. Building 
owners objected, saying no disabled people come here anyway so why should I 
bother? The irony is, disabled people didn't go there because they couldn't.
Many app developers either don't know blind people are using VoiceOver, think 
we only use special apps, or think that we don't want to use their particular 
app. We're a low-incidence population, so misconceptions are common. And that's 
yet another reason why this resolution has been a great move. I've read a 
number of tech publications this morning, where a story about the resolution is 
running. I figured it would get out there eventually, which is why those who 
thought the resolution made no difference were naive and didn't understand the 
media clout of an organisation like NFB.
Of course there are those reacting badly. As I've sought to illustrate, nothing 
worth winning in this world was ever won without objection, so I'm relaxed 
about that. But you know what's good? People are talking about app 
accessibility in the mainstream. Some of the commenters are educating the 
ignorant about how powerful VoiceOver is, what blind people are doing with 
iPhones and how relatively easy it is to make an app accessible. Sure, there'll 
be people who will never be persuaded, but today, more people are a little more 
informed about accessibility than yesterday.
Some have objected strongly to a quote in the Reuters piece on NFB's resolution 
in which an affiliate board member mentioned the potential of a law suit on 
this issue. I listened to the debate carefully on Saturday, and the question of 
a law suit didn't come up. I also know from experience that once a story gets 
into the wild, news agencies will contact people they have on file, who may not 
necessarily be an authorised spokesperson for the organisation. That's just the 
nature of the media. Once the story gets out there, you can't control who they 
talk to.
I realise I've written a bit of a novel here, but I really want to try the best 
I can to illustrate to younger people in particular why many of the 
accommodations they enjoy today such as the course they're studying, the job 
they're doing, the vocational choices they have, were achieved over the 
opposition of some often powerful forces. We need to be far less worried about 
what others think, and more concerned with a considered position on what we 
believe the place of blind people in society to be. Do we have sufficient 
self-worth that we're willing to do what it takes to achieve equality, even 
when it necessitates ruffling a few feathers, or are we content to languish in 
our mediocrity and accept being rebuffed.
In this case, I think NFB made the right call. Maybe Apple will come to the 
table, maybe it won't. But already, more people are aware of accessibility than 
they were before this resolution. If Apple does engage, the outcome won't be 
that every single app will be accessible, but with good will on both sides, 
progress will be made. Then, in 20 years' time, people will be trying to 
remember why it was ever contentious.

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