I'm starting day three without #JAWS on my new job. While JAWS is sitting there worrying about its missing authorization code and telling me I have to restart and work in 40-minute mode, #NVDA is humming along giving me exactly what I need to keep working! So now we ask which is the truly professional screen reader? #accessibility #Vispero
@darrell73 That is interesting. I heard that in Europe and US JAWS license is provided for work places and for students. Are you simply used to JAWS or there are specific cases where NVDA doesn't really work in software you use? Great that NVDA works for you!
@destranis @Sevapopov How do these European companies justify disallowing #NVDA while still using open-source browsing engines?
@destranis @Sevapopov Fascinating, so how do they handle open-source web browsers like Chrome and Firefox? Do they ban virtually all web browsers too?
@destranis @darrell73 @Sevapopov It sounds like your employer is simply controlling over what software you can use - and that itself is not uncommon anywhere in the world - In almost all cases, that of itself is not anti-open source, rather it is done in the interest of security
@NVAccess @destranis @darrell73 @Sevapopov Any US company with HIPPA and other tight restrictions refuse to use any open source software. :( I can't speak to other countries though.

@sapphireangel @destranis @darrell73 @Sevapopov That is simply not true! HIPAA has to do with privacy of patient health information, and nothing to do with the code of any programs in use. NVDA is used by plenty of organisations with HIPAA requirements and we regularly answer queries on that because companies need to know that data is safe (NVDA does not save or send personal information anyway, so it's fine). See https://www.nvaccess.org/corporate-government/#collectedInfo

Also: https://www.accountablehq.com/post/open-source-hipaa-compliance-guide-free-tools-checklists-and-best-practices

https://medevel.com/hipaa-ready-compliant-techs-apps-18919/

NV Access | Corporate & Government

@NVAccess @destranis @darrell73 @Sevapopov I'm just telling you what I know from working in the healthcare industry and the strictness of HIPPA. NVDA hasn't been allowed. I wish it wasn't such a legal mess to use it because I'd rather it than jaws, but saying you do these things, isn't enough for most agencies. I'm glad NVDA has made huge steps in Europe though. The US may be tougher in many aspects. My understanding of HIPPA is it takes more than just saying you do a bunch of stuff.
@sapphireangel @destranis @darrell73 @Sevapopov And I'm telling you that is wrong. NVDA is used in numerous healthcare settings. HIPAA has nothing to do with open vs closed source. Please provide a link to back that claim up? I provided links to dozens of pages citing using open source programs in HIPAA environments, and the HHS page explaining what HIPAA is which mentions nothing about software licenses. Once again, if your organisation won't allow NVDA, I'm happy to talk with them.
@NVAccess @destranis @darrell73 @Sevapopov My guess is the agencies that are are smaller. Bigger companies in my experience won't. I think NVDA has same issues that AIRA does. Granted Aira isn't open source, but companies won't allow software on its systems easily or to see protected information. Especially with all the extra protections and restrictions with HIPPA honestly without a lot more work it is legally a risk for a company to do so.