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How to Dehumanize Accessibility with AI | Ashlee M Boyer
How to Dehumanize Accessibility with AI | Ashlee M Boyer
@ashleemboyer@mstdn.social on why it’s dehumanizing and unnecessary to ask “AI” about the disabled experience, when disabled people exist.
AI is not impacted by inaccessibility. It is not a disabled person. It cannot explain web accessibility from the perspective of a disabled person.
Removing the human factor of inaccessibility stories does not build empathy. It dehumanizes the stories. It dehumanizes US.
Additionally, inaccessibility is not a result of a lack of empathy. It’s a result of ableism. To still position lack of empathy as the main problem in almost 2025, is a failure to consider vital historical context.
Creating AI caricatures of disabled people does not help us dismantle systemic ableism.
I also take issue with the alleged need for comments to be “appealing” or “humorous.” Nothing appealing nor humorous about inaccessibility. Inaccessibility is PAINFUL in every single sense of the word. When disabled people encounter inaccessibility, we are harmed every. single. time.
·ashleemboyer.com·
How to Dehumanize Accessibility with AI | Ashlee M Boyer
Foundations: types of disability
Foundations: types of disability
By @TetraLogical@a11y.social
We are all, in essence, temporarily abled. As an ageing society, the reality is that our abilities are not fixed - they change over time. Disability is a complex and deeply personal experience that can impact anyone, whether through permanent, temporary, or situational conditions, or even a mix of these.
When something is inaccessible, it can be inaccessible to people with a permanent disability, such as blindness, but also those with temporary disabilities, like a migraine, or situational challenges, such as struggling to read a screen due to sun glare.
·tetralogical.com·
Foundations: types of disability
We Need to Talk About How We Talk About Accessibility - JUX
We Need to Talk About How We Talk About Accessibility - JUX
Introduction Words matter. Despite their inadequacies, words are our best means of expression. Because we are not born with words, we learn language as a means to translate our innate selves into something comprehensible to ourselves and others. You could say language is like a two-way mirror, projecting and reflecting our identity. Our facility with
·uxpajournal.org·
We Need to Talk About How We Talk About Accessibility - JUX