Jonathan Mosen

@JonathanMosen@caneandable.social
1.7K Followers
541 Following
1.4K Posts
Husband, dad, granddad, proud member of and Executive Director for Accessibility Excellence at the National Federation of the Blind, #blindness advocate, #accessibility geek, experienced leader, broadcaster on and owner of Mushroom FM, Beatles fan, cricket nut, Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit, living the keto dream. Keeping things in perspective through #meditation. Opinions here are mine because I thought of them myself
The NFB’s Center of Excellence in Nonvisual AccessibilityHttps://nfb.org/cena
My personal website, Mosen at Largehttps://mosen.org
My Internet radio show, The Mosen Explosionhttps://MushroomFm.com/JonathanMosen
So very excited to open the Find My app and see my daughter Heidi and son-in-law Henry in the United States!
They’re in New York for the night, then taking the train to Baltimore tomorrow, which Henry’s going to love. We have a temporary apartment for them in our complex for the couple of weeks they are here.
It’s sure going to be odd hearing their funny accents again!
Mate! We have YouTube TV now. What a lot of channels there are. Makes Bonnie a happy banana. So far the only thing I have used the DVR functionality for is Saturday NIght Live.
Getting yourself set up in a new country is a significant life change which takes time, effort, patience and a lot of learning.
I've been prepared for most of it, but just experienced a fun one that I didn't expect.
I've had an eBay account for about 25 years I think. I didn't use it a lot, because in New Zealand there is a dominant site called TradeMe which does the same thing. But eBay was good for certain unique gadgets, and especially for hard to find music and old radio shows.
Now that Bonnie and I are settled into our apartment and we're preparing to do the big things like get my studio set up again, there is a hard to find but important gadget I need to buy, since I'm using the one I have in my office at the NFB. A quick online search told me that eBay would be the quickest place to get it.
It was a smooth process. I use a unique password for every account I have, thanks to 1Password, so I logged into eBay and switched to passkey authentication for the future. Parenthetical tech tip, use passkeys wherever you can. They're more secure and convenient than passwords if you are using a password manager.
I also went through a verification process where they texted me at my New Zealand number, which I still have access to in addition to my US one.
Since I don't live in New Zealand anymore, I deleted my NZ address, changed to my US phone number so I won't get locked out in future if I lose my NZ number, and I added my US address so I can get the things I buy. All necessary steps when you've moved countries.
I then made my purchase and was impressed by how accessible and swift the process was. I made a mental note that I should mention on the old social media what a good experience I'd had. It is important to point out the good things as well as advocate for change when that's needed.
Well, I jinxed it with my optimism, that's what I did.
About an hour after I made my purchase, I received an email of doom from eBay informing me that my account had been suspended because it had been hacked and fraudulent activity had been detected. To some degree, I understand this. They had detected a log-in from a different country than the one I normally use, and a US credit card was used to make a purchase. Yet some of these changes involved two-factor authentication, which means that the hacker would have needed to have snatched my iPhone out of my hands in New Zealand and logged in from the USA. I do wonder now whether paying via PayPal may have avoided this problem because it would have been another service I would have logged into and demonstrated that I am me. I mean I think I am me, this is too big a philosophical question to break my brain with at the moment.
Anyway, while I was a bit perturbed, I thought it would be easily fixable if I got in touch with the nice eBay people and gave them reassurance that I am the genuine Jonathan Mosen, accept no imitations.
The email I received sent me to a page and told me to activate a link that did not exist on the page they directed me too. Great start there guys. Finally I found the appropriate contact section, and it invited me to sign into my account to proceed.
At this point, I was confronted by a captcha from HCaptcha. Yes, if this was audio, this is the bit you would hear dramatic doom music. I am afraid this never ends well, in my experience. Getting their accessibility cookie is a tedious, time-consuming process, and once you have it, I often find that it simply doesn't work when you try to solve their convoluted puzzles. I was unable to log in to try and recover my account on my own. I ended up having to delete the unfit-for-purpose accessibility cookie, and have Aira come to the rescue and solve the captcha for me.
Contending with HCaptcha took a while, but when I finally overcame it, I was able to have an eBay "customer support" person call me within a minute of submitting the form.
I was confident that I was about to get my account back, because surely there are eBay users who move countries from time to time? I explained the situation. She asked a few reasonable questions which I was able to answer without hesitation, and then she put me on hold. I've spent a lot of time on hold with eBay over the last few hours. They have this extraordinary little loop of classical music that cuts off abruptly and loops around. It's kind of like a broken tooth. Once you notice it, it's difficult to un-notice it.
Oh, for my family in New Zealand reading this, I have not actually broken a tooth. Chill.
Finally she came back and informed me that they couldn't get my account restored. I asked her why that was, and she said because too many changes had been made at once. I told her that while I appreciated that she was only the messenger here, it seemed pretty obvious to me that if you're living in a new country, you're going to have to change your phone number and your address. Surely people have done this before?
I asked her what she suggested I do next, and she said the only thing I could do was create a new eBay account. I asked her if she would please delete the suspended account, and she said she couldn't do that, because once the account was in this state, there was little they could do with it.
I said to her that she seemed to accept that I am me, and she seemed to accept that the algorithm that did this had done so in error, and yet she still couldn't delete an account so I could use my primary email account to set up a new one? She confirmed that my summary was indeed accurate and started saying "thank you for calling eBay Customer Service", which is corporate speak for "go away, you annoying little person".
I gently intervened and asked to talk to a supervisor. She said sure, a supervisor will call me back within 48 hours.
Well, a few hours later, a supervisor phoned me back. I appreciate that, I wasn't expecting the call to be returned. As is often the case with this sort of thing, I had to tell my story all over again, then either to further build my character, or to dispense further karma for when I should have been a better person, she put me on hold and gave me another broken tooth moment with that classical loop that ends abruptly in the middle and starts all over again.
She came back after some time, cautioned me that this would take a while and asked if I was sure I really wanted to do this? I could tell she was hoping I'd have something better to do, like, oh I don't know, break down another huge cardboard box from New Zealand or something. But hey, I'm tenacious. I told her sure, why not? Eventually she came back and told me she was going to transfer me to the person who could make all my dreams come true and get me back on eBay! "Great, hi I'm Jonathan. What's your name?" I said. Only to be responded to by "beep, beep, beep". "Beep beep beep?" I said. That's a great name. But then I realized that the call had been dropped in the transfer, and that's the last I've heard from eBay.
The work-around? I've created an account using my Apple Account, which uses my primary email. I used the hide my email feature, so as far as eBay is concerned, they are getting an email address that hasn't been used on eBay before.
Fun and games. But that hCaptcha issue is a real problem, and probably a topic for a different forum and time.
Hope you are rocking your weekend. And maybe I've put a Weird Al song in your head.
The most important word in our name, National Federation of the Blind, is the word of.
I'm impressed by the thoughtful approach being taken here. Bringing Quote Posts to Mastodon - Mastodon Blog https://blog.joinmastodon.org/2025/02/bringing-quote-posts-to-mastodon/
Bringing Quote Posts to Mastodon

Sharing our thinking and progress on bringing Quote Posts to Mastodon, with a goal to create a safe and respectful space for everyone.

Mastodon Blog
BBC Radio 4 pays tribute to ‘Peggy Woolley’ with special Archers prequel marking VE Day 80th anniversary https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/2024/bbc-radio-4-pays-tribute-to-peggy-woolley-in-special-archers-prequel/
BBC Radio 4 pays tribute to ‘Peggy Woolley’ with special Archers prequel marking VE Day 80th anniversary

June Spencer, who played Peggy Woolley for over 70 years, died last year aged 105

Mark your calendars for our next Center of Excellence in Nonvisual Accessibility (CENA) training on how to create a PowerPoint presentation as a blind person. This training will be held on Tuesday, March 25 from 2:00-3:30 p.m., eastern.

You will learn how to create a captivating PowerPoint presentation using a screen reader, how to work with speaker’s notes, how to deliver your PowerPoint presentation using either Braille or speech, and more.

Register today: https://buff.ly/K7xxVCH

Several days ago, the National Federation of the Blind’s Center of Excellence in Nonvisual Accessibility began receiving reports of a significant regression in the Facebook iOS app. This bug made it difficult for some VoiceOver users to review comments before posting them.
We reached out to our contacts at Meta, they investigated the issue urgently, identified the problem and a fix is now rolling out.
We thank those who reported this issue to us and acknowledge Meta’s prompt action.
I was pleased to sit down with Pam MacNeill of the Disability Disruptor’s Podcast for a New Zealand exit interview of sorts, discussing the serious problems that plague disability services, leadership and activism in New Zealand.
It was also a delight as always to discuss these issues with @graemeinnes, a fearless and tireless leader who continues to do impactful work, including with the United Blind Leaders group in Australia.
The issues we cover, including the necessity for blind people to control our own destinies and lead the agencies that provide services to us, are of vital importance. https://castro.fm/episode/uml6GE
Disability Disrupters: In conversation with Graeme Innes and Jonathan Mosen (1h2m)

Read transcriptGraeme Innes Graeme Innes AM is a lawyer, author, and company director. He is the Chancellor of Central Queensland University, a member of the board of the National Disability Insurance Agency, and a member of the board of the State Insurance Regulatory Authority of NSW. Graeme's autobiography Finding a Way achieved popular acclaim in 2016. He has been a human rights practitioner for more than forty years, and is a conference presenter and facilitator. Graeme was a Commissioner a…

I suppose if there is one positive thing about the current environment here, it is that people in the media and in political life who think being blind automatically makes you ignorant and incompetent feel emboldened to be more upfront about it. That allows us to tackle it head-on.
For years, in various capacities, I have campaigned against the use of the word "blind" to equate with these things, because it subconsciously reenforces stereotypes about blind people.
It is very difficult for a blind person to find employment, sometimes because of lack of training, and often because, despite training, we are deprived of opportunity due to common misconceptions. It is a struggle to find people who believe in us, and the need for public education is ongoing and real.
In the US, the Federal Government has in recent years been a place where qualified, competent people who happen to be blind can thrive and be recognized for the talented people they are.
So it is deeply disappointing that a capable public servant who is blind is being ridiculed and discredited not for anything he said, not for being bad at his job, because he clearly is not, but merely because his blindness is being used as a weapon and a tool of derision. This release from the National Federation of the Blind is so important. Blind people cannot allow this sort of discourse to go unchallenged.

https://nfb.org/about-us/press-room/statement-national-federation-blind-harmful-stereotyping-blind-people-political