As an enthusiast for open source software who is also disabled, I get frustrated at how inaccessible a lot of open source software is. When there are accessibility options, they're usually bolted-on additions that don't work very well. Disabled users are forced into ad-hoc compromises that are laborious to install and labyrinthine to operate. The frustration often drives us back to corporate software. OSS is high friction and low benefit for many disabled users.

Open source developers would gain a lot from integrating accessible design into their products from the ground up (like TTS! My kingdom for fully integrated neural TTS on my browser and operating system). Accessibility features don't just help disabled people. More than half of all people using a phone use accessibility features. Do you really want to exclude half your users?

Accessibility also requires you to think about things like simplicity of design and ease of access for all your users. It can provide redundancy for errors (for example: alt text can be helpful when an image doesn't load, captions can provide a backup if their audio drops out, alternate input methods can allow people to continue using an app if they have keyboard or mouse issues). It can improve design (example: clearer instructions, easier to read text, simple consistent navigation). In short: it makes your software better.

Making the world more accessible for one group improves access for all: this is a basic principle of universal design. Stop excluding us and start making us the core of what you do — you will be a better developer for it.

#opensource #disability #universaldesign #softwaredevelopment

I also want to note that tech companies are trying to use us as a meat shield. They're throwing AI into everything under the guise of "accessibility". Meta tried to roll out its smart glasses facial recognition feature to blind people first, to disguise the fact it was mass surveillance. There are so many examples.

Give us somewhere else to go. It's more important than ever right now. Accessible open source software is a tool of freedom and resistance.

#oss #opensource

@fullfathomfive I'm blind, and I'm sick of being used as a shield by these corporations. I do not agree with their idealogical stances, nor do I consent to being used to make their goals more palettable to the general public. FOSS community, you have a golden opportunity to win over a large portion of the blind and disabled communities. We hate this corporate surveillance garbage and would gladly take an alternative
@PepperTheVixen @fullfathomfive is facial recognition something that would be genuinely useful for you if it was not so creepy (E.g. on-device, deleting footage as it goes)? Or is this one of those things where they just decided people need this while ignoring all of your actual needs? I'm aware answers will probably vary per person
@raphaelmorgan @fullfathomfive You're going to get wildly different answers based on who you ask. I think it could be useful for knowing who's near you if you don't have vision. The only blind-focused company I know of that's doing it in a non-creepy way is Orcam. You explicitly have to show their devices a face and assign a name to that face. Everything is done on device and can't be exported without dismantling the thing. My info is several years out of date, so it's possible that OrCam have changed their ways. Also, I'm not a big fan of OrCam in general. They spend more money on marketting than on their actual products and I've heard nothing but horror stories from their customers. When I attended a presentation in LA, the speaker did a steve jobs schtick and spent half the presentation patting the company on the back. The tech itself is pretty cool though
@PepperTheVixen @fullfathomfive thanks for the info! I hope the available choices improve for anyone this would actually help. For everyone's sake, because I do not want those Facebook glasses anywhere near me 😅
@raphaelmorgan @fullfathomfive Fuck facebook, fuck meta, fuck every single company under the meta umbrella, and fuck mark zuckerberg in particular. He belongs in prison for crimes against Humanity
@fullfathomfive They just don't care. Well, not all, of course, but lots and lots of them. Just don't care. "It's open-source, go and fix yourself, and I'll merge. Maybe." — that's what I read most often.

@fullfathomfive @FreakyFwoof In my experience, UI/UX is often weak for everyone in OSS. Projects can be engineering and functional led, with everything else (UI, docs) secondary. It doesn’t surprise me that in such environments accessibility is also weak.

One area where market competition and regulatory compliance produce better results, perhaps.

@davidbcohen @fullfathomfive @FreakyFwoof It is also an area where people who just came into it from a coding angle have not enough experience in how to get stuff right, and getting experience "naturally" is very labor-intense, and there aren't as much good teaching resources about it as there are about "just writing software".
@fullfathomfive This includes all sorts of choices OSS developers make. I’m constantly amazed at how shitty most software available on Linux is.
@fullfathomfive @VulpineAmethyst While I often hate Apple, the way the accessibility was introduced by baking it into iOS made so many things easier for me.
I had 2 blind clients, and seeing them navigate a touch screen at speed because everything was standardised was impressive.
@x0 @fullfathomfive That's what I was asking! Even telling those developers for those fediversal apps like when I told @dansup about their apps like loops, Sup and all if they become accessible for blind people... Let all 100% of open-sourced software be accessible for us blind people! 100% open source, 0% cloced sourced. Down with big brother, down with big brother! @FreakyFwoof
@fullfathomfive "More than half of all people using a phone use accessibility features. Do you really want to exclude half your users?"
The amount of websites and apps that I have to turn off large text in order to operate is absolutely bonkers to me. I'm 25, my vision is only gonna get worse, and I'm not even vision impaired. I have the same condition that a shitton of people get as they get older, and not everyone can afford the optometrist and reading glasses. The default text is fucking tiny
@fullfathomfive In this day and age, expecting accessibility is considered, even by some of the blind community, supposedly to be blind entitlement, unfortunately, and developers on the other hand figure we've got our vertual care givers in the form of aira or be My eyes, so they can't be bothered to make their software or websites accessible out of the box. I mean, we're living in a day and age where accessibility is in itself a dirty word and has to be replaced by a cutesy abirevation.