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WCAG guidelines are clear for the website, and mobile apps. However, with the increase use of the OTT platform, the accessibility levels and guidelines are missing for TV apps. Eg:
Focused ring: what should be the color contrast for the TV apps for A, AA, AAA
Color contrast: for background color and text
Font-size: Minimum font-size
Navigation: How the navigation should be
Hints: How the hints should be, and position
Screenreaders: Usage of screenreaders
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
WCAG is technology-agnostic in its principles and criteria. Your points 1 and 2 are already covered with existing criteria. Points 3, 4, 5, 6 go outside of the scope of what WCAG in general mandates.
Correct. WCAG has always driven to be as agnostic as possible to the technologies used on the web.
However, this should not be confused with being technology-comprehensive.
What I mean by that is that:
WCAG assumes things that are not always true when not talking about web content
For example - it assumes there is a user agent.
so we eliminated 4.1.1 because we are assuming there is a browser that repairs all those things.
we assume there is always a keyboard or keyboard equivalent
we assume that there are AT that can be installed on the devices that house the browser (or that the user can choose a device that has the AT they need — and use that browser to access the content
If you try to apply WCAG to non-web content and non-web software and mobile apps and to ICT in general
many of the provisions apply directly
- others apply with simple words substitutions
- still others apply awkwardly or do not quite work
but most importantly - there are all sorts of other things that WCAG does not even mention
- all aspects of hardware
- all aspects dealing with “closed functionality” products (hardware and software) that do not accept AT
- how to provide access when there isn’t a browser or AT (users can choose which hardward to access the web mostly but cannot chose a different technology when they confront a kiosk or copy machine or thermostat or television or any other ICT.
WCAG2ICT is written specifically to raise these issues — but it only points them out and does not solve them or make WCAG comprehensive
So it is great for web content
it is (very) useful for non-web docs and software and mobile apps — but has to be adapted and does not cover all the areas / aspects.
WCAG guidelines are clear for the website, and mobile apps. However, with the increase use of the OTT platform, the accessibility levels and guidelines are missing for TV apps. Eg:
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: