Web Accessibility in Government: Common Misses and Practical Fixes | Lullabot
ADA deadlines are here, but true accessibility is more than compliance. Discover six common government website issues and practical fixes you can start today.
How much should you spend on accessibility? - Karl Groves
Some recent discussions in the Accessibility Slack, as well as with some customers, inspired me to do some research on what you should spend on digital accessibility. In a business environment increasingly shaped by regulation, risk, and reputation, the question “How much should you spend on digital accessibility?” is more than a budgeting decision—it’s a
28 juin 2025 : une avancée décisive pour l’accessibilité des produits et des services en Europe | handicap.gouv.fr
Le 28 juin marque la date d’entrée en vigueur de la directive (UE) 2019/882 du 17 avril 2019, relative aux exigences en matière d’accessibilité applicables aux produits et services. Véritable levier pour l’égalité des droits et des chances, ce texte européen traduit la volonté politique de faire de l’accessibilité un pilier de la citoyenneté.
Pseudomotion, Motion Sensitivity, and Accessibility
Newton’s Cradle with one red ball hanging on a thread, retracted and about to bang into five silver balls also hanging by threads. Motion sensitivity is a...
W3C Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 3.0 will provide a wide range of recommendations for making web content more accessible to users with disabilities. Following these guidelines will address many of the needs of users with blindness, low vision and other vision impairments; deafness and hearing loss; limited movement and dexterity; speech disabilities; sensory disorders; cognitive and learning disabilities; and combinations of these. These guidelines address accessibility of web content on desktops, laptops, tablets, mobile devices, wearable devices, and other web of things devices. The guidelines apply to various types of web content including static, dynamic, interactive, and streaming content; visual and auditory media; virtual and augmented reality; and alternative access presentation and control. These guidelines also address related web tools such as user agents (browsers and assistive technologies), content management systems, authoring tools, and testing tools.
The Requirements for W3C Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 3.0 documentation is the next phase of development of the next major upgrade to accessibility guidelines. WCAG 3.0 will be the successor to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2 series. The Silver Task Force of the Accessibility Guidelines Working Group and the W3C Silver Community group have partnered to incubate the needs, requirements, and structure for the new accessibility guidance. To date, the group has:
How to Convince People to Care and Invest in Accessibility by Stéphanie Walter - UX Researcher & Designer.
Learn how to advocate for accessibility, drive change without authority, and connect inclusive design to business impact. Practical tips, strategies, and real-world examples included.
WCAG 3.0’s Proposed Scoring Model: A Shift In Accessibility Evaluation — Smashing Magazine
WCAG is evolving. Since 1999, the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines have defined accessibility in binary terms: either a success criterion is met or not. But real user experience is rarely that simple. WCAG 3.0 rethinks the model — prioritizing usability over compliance and shifting the focus toward the quality of access rather than the mere presence of features. Could this be the start of a new era in accessibility?
What It Means to Shift Left on Accessibility and How to Do It Right | Lullabot
Shifting left on accessibility means building inclusivity into every phase of a project—from strategy to QA—saving time, reducing risk, and creating better user experiences.