Your daily frequent11y newsletter, brought to you by @ChrisBAshton:
Please note that an unfinished draft of this article was accidentally published earlier. The finished draft below has been hastily rewritten. I don’t know what happened to the previous version – very frustrating my changes were lost!
The ADA lawsuit settlement involving an accessibility overlay
- A UX Collective article about a recent case against accessibility overlays.
- Eyebobs is an online glasses company that used an accessibility overlay to attempt to conform to WCAG. It was sued by a blind plaintiff in January 2021, for violations of the ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act).
- The case enrolled Karl Groves as an expert witness, who wrote a 35-page indictment of how inaccessible the Eyebobs site was even with the overlay. Karl also created overlayfactsheet.com, to educate on how accessibility overlays don’t work.
- The settlement requires Eyebobs to take the following actions:
- Create an accessibility coordination team
- Perform an accessibility audit of its ‘digital properties’ (using an accessibility consultant)
- Adopt an accessibility statement
- Implement an accessibility strategy
- Provide accessibility training to its employees
- It must comply with these measures within two years.
- It must also work with third-parties (such as embedded maps) to make their content accessible. The deadline for this can be extended up to five years, reflecting the added complexity.
- The article ends with a link to Lighthouse vs ADP – “the next lawsuit to keep an eye out for”.
Prefer longer newsletters? You can subscribe to week11y, fortnight11y or even month11y updates! Every newsletter gets the same content; it is your choice to have short, regular emails or longer, less frequent ones. Curated with ♥ by developer @ChrisBAshton.