Monday, November 15, 2010

Call To Put Together 'inaccessible' Sites

A promotion has launched directed at enhancing the online experience for people with disabilities.

A new site called Fix the Web allows infirm and comparison people to inform problems they find when surfing.

There are an estimated 6 million infirm and comparison users in the UK but many sites go on to result in problems for them.

The new scheme, launched by gift Citizens Online, will see volunteers inform complaints back to site owners.

Fix the Web has set itself the desirous aim of getting 10,000 volunteers traffic with 250,000 websites inside of two years.

Common problems that movement when infirm users roller the web include:

sites that are unsuitable with shade readers

content that is tough to read

websites that hinder access for non-mouse users

over-fussy and distracting layouts.

As good as stating faults around the website , volunteers will moreover be able to e-mail or twitter their issues.

Dr Gail Bradbrook of Citizens Online called for a "committed organisation of tech volunteers" to take assign of the problem.

"I think many techies would be astonished to think that the web they admire so ample is on the contrary people. we resolutely think that this isn't a complaint infirm people should have to attend to on their own," she said.

"We design to see ramps, additional far-reaching doorways and blending toilet facilities, but what about the homogeneous online?

"Do we ponder that websites might need their own practical ramps?" she added.

But Dr Bradbrook was interested to highlight that the exercise would not be a "name and shame" promotion but that volunteers would work to one side website owners.

According to the World Wide Web Consortium, usually 19% of websites encounter the minimum typical for web access.

In 2008 it drew up a set of discipline to upgrade web accessibility.

Fix the Web is one of the initiatives drawn up by the e-Accessibility Forum, that was combined in October by Communications Minister Ed Vaizey.

Mr Vaizey has affianced a "step-change" in e-accessibility by 2012.

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