on 17/11/2012 03:48 James said the following:
Lorelle, I'm an advocate of accessible sites and explaining things like
Section 508 (and have been since there was a WWW), but--I'm unclear about
how WordPress is required to "comply" with US accessibility laws or laws
of other countries. Also, I'm not clear how WordPress currently prevents
building accessible sites for those aiming to create them. Can you explain
that a bit, or point me towards more information?

WordPress itself would come under the general heading of "CMS/Software Requirements" within the anti-discrimination laws of any given country. Certainly in the UK, it would fall under the Disability Discrimination Act if it did not make reasonable adjustments to ensure that disabled users are not unfairly disadvantaged when it came to using the software. Many other countries in Europe have similar - if not more stringent - legal requirements. I'd imagine ADA would apply in the US.

Legality aside, there are the ethical responsibilities to ensure that disabled users can create sites as easily as possible. And there are quite a few disabled users who use WordPress as their CMS of choice - primarily because it already offers a reasonable level of accessibility. But that doesn't mean it can't be improved. We also need to teach people how to get the best of the features that it offers. :-)

AFAIIA, Section 508 only applies to the public-facing side of (federal?) sites. So the onus is really on the site owner but, again, I think we have an ethical duty to help people create the most accessible sites that they can.

HTH

esmi
--
http://quirm.net
http://blackwidows.co.uk
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