Re: Agenda and zoom in for Accessibility Summary sub-TF call on Thursday August 18 at 14 UTC

All,

Please find the minutes from today's call at:
https://www.w3.org/2022/08/18-pcg-a11y-minutes.html, or below as text:

Meeting minutes<GeorgeK_> Date 18 August 2022Accessibility Summary is
SHOULD not MUST

GK: decision was made last week\

GK: Matt noted the official definition of the a11y-summary. Is consistent,
but highlights subtleties and nuance

GK: Are we in agreement that this is one of our guiding principles for
writing guidelines?

(No comments)

GK: will move forward with that assumption

the way we describe conformance has changed

it is now quite human readable - that helps us a lot

now if the conformance statement is displayed to user, we don't need to put
that conformance summary into the accessibility summary

Naomi: it is hard to make a definitive statement

but in scenarios where there is little input from publishers... make a note
"we are striving to..." - but publishers cannot make definitive statements

GK: agree with this. In terms of guidance from a11y summary - if it
provides nuance...

whatever term you want to use: "we believe..." or "we strive to..."

Naomi: issue around number of languages authors invent

GK: Make sure we capture that in examples

and other verbage we create

Naomi: suggestion or recommendation

Gregoriao

Gregorio: this looks good - we should avoid duplication of data

if this is intended to display on the interface, we should not re-write this

CharlesL: Agree with gregorio. Also notes that Matt pointed out that we
should NOT provide ally statements in multiple languagges

ONLy have the one langauge

CharlesL: may want to look at that more\

GK: In there now, and one of the things we want to retain

GK: a11y summary is only language of published content

GK: want to reference user-experience guide, with an expectation that the
a11y metadata will be available to the end user

and that we do not "double up" the data

CL: agree. the older version of the spec ... URL. But it was not that
readable, so we added it to the summary

but now that it is human readable, we can output that, and do not need to
repeat in the summary

GK: we also need to revisit user experience guide

all things there related to conformance and the URL approach... we need to
go back and address that. (i.e. there is not language changed needed)

ACTION: revisit user experience guide to align with recent changes to
Accessibility 1.1 Spec - assign to Community Group

CL: make it an agenda item for next meeting

GK: IN the outline there are some principles identified

pointer to definition in Schema.org (guiding principle)

re-statement of things we expect to have been already expressed, not
necessary to repeat in Summary

GK: example - if somebody has metadata "No accessibility hazards" the UX
guide suggests that it be presented as No accessibility hazards

if accessibility mode 'textual' is present, it is announced as 'screen
reader abled' [sic]

so no need to repeat in summary

so those are the principles - all the current stuff and then we look at
what else is needed

Keep the things that remain valuable, remove the rest. Also the high-level
considerations

GP: simpler if we call this "Accessibility Note" (conceptual) - the goal is
to add human-readable information that augments the metadata

GK: in github repro now - the title is "Accessibility Summary guideline for
ePub..."

and it is accessibility summary in Schema - it gets translated when it goes
to Onix

Q: is it still call ed that there?

Yes

GK: so works there too - no need to change title

GP: the proposal was to only use that "name" as internal shorthand for this
group/discussion

concern that "Summary" is misleading

JF: Understand the unfortunate concern - is this "fully baked"

GK: yes, took years to get into Schema.org

In abstract we could emphasize this is an augmentation

JF: echoes back understanding - suggests we DO speak to this in the abstract

GK: write in the 'template' that this is augmentation data

JF: sounds reasonable to me, but others?

Naomi: may be redundant and possibly overwhelming

but this may not JUST be augmentation, it may also include 'new' stuff that
lacks definition @ Schema today

so that new stuff would need to be exposed somewhere (lacks controled
vocab) - then this would be the right place too

GK: absolutely!

CL: not sure if we want to provide examples. have seen publishers who have
added additional items to their ePub that went above and beyond

example: publisher had morse code, and added audio clip of the dots and
dashes (above and beyond)

Naomi: working on crossword... there is a file format that can be
downloaded into multiple crossword apps

(.puz) file extension

so making that file format available, and noting such in Accessibility
Summary would be great

discussion around accessibility versus usability - do we want to expand the
Accessibility Summary to capture 'usability' isses

Naomi: there is a gray line there

GK: we've discussed this in the past. ePub by its very nature is more
accessible than other formats

not sure if everyone is aware that ePub *IS* more accessible than, say,
PDF, so making these statements are beneficial

i.e. transformability (font resize and reflow) benefits all

GP: have concerns, but may want to defer to next call - example in file may
be an issue

having examples that could be "copied and psted" may not be a good idea

VL: re no capability for multiple languages has been dropped - there may be
a need if a book features multiple languages

CL: it would be difficult to tag that properly - there is usually a
"primary language" even in multi-lang books

so publishers may 'reprint' if there is a need for books targeted to
multiple languages

Q: to ask about multi-language

Namoi: notes that OPF file does not support multiple languages

may also be onerous on retailers - so decided that it is not ideal, but
use-cases seem very small

GP: believes this problem with languages has already been resolved

GK: need to wrap this up now. Believes Avneesh plans on a call for next
week.

But George and Charles will not be there. Suggests that this discussion
wait until they return

GK: but would like to update the existing repro with what we agreed to
here, and get the PR out for review

will mainly 'remove' things that are inappropriate, and then add some new
draft text for review

+1 to Georges proposal

GK: next call to discuss this will be in 2 weeks (Sept.1)

JF

On Tue, Aug 16, 2022 at 10:29 PM <kerscher@montana.com> wrote:

> Dear Accessibility Summary sub-TF,
>
>
>
> Date: Thursday August 18, 2022
>
> Time: 14 UTC, 7:00 a.m. Pacific, 10:00 a.m. East Coast, 15:00 London,
> 16:00 Milan
>
> Location: see zoom below
>
> IRC channel: #pcg-a11y
>
> server: irc.w3.org
>
> port: 6665 or 6667
>
>
>
> Agenda
>
>
>
>    1. Scribe
>    2. Accessibility Summary is now a recommendation (should) not a
>    requirement (must) in the EPUB Accessibility Conformance and
>    Discoverability Specification 1.1 in CR. The change happened last week.
>    3. Background
>
> 3.1 official definition of accessibilitySummary in schema.org
>
> https://schema.org/accessibilitySummary
>
> “A human-readable summary of specific accessibility features or
> deficiencies, consistent with the other accessibility metadata but
> expressing subtleties such as "short descriptions are present but long
> descriptions will be needed for non-visual users" or "short descriptions
> are present and no long descriptions are needed."
>
>
>
> 3.2 There has been a change to the conformance section 3.5.2 of the EPUB
> Accessibility Conformance and Discoverability specification 1.1. Now the
> metadata is clearly understandable as a natural language description of
> conformance. The strings are required and can be parsed to align with
> specific statements.
>
>
>
> https://www.w3.org/TR/epub-a11y-11/
>
> Here is the text:
>
>
>
> To indicate conformance to the accessibility requirements of this
> specification, an EPUB publication [epub-3] MUST specify in its metadata
> section a conformsTo property [dcterms] exactly matching (i.e., both in
> case and spacing) the following pattern:
>
> EPUB-A11Y-A11Y-VER_WCAG-WCAG-VER-WCAG-LVL
>
> where:
>
> A11Y-VER
>
> Specifies the version number of the EPUB Accessibility specification the
> publication conforms to. The value MUST NOT include decimal points (e.g.,
> the value 11 indicates this version of this specification).
>
> WCAG-VER
>
> Specifies the version number of WCAG the publication conforms to. The
> value MUST NOT include decimal points (e.g., 20 for WCAG 2.0 or 21 for WCAG
> 2.1).
>
> WCAG-LVL
>
> Specifies the WCAG conformance level the publication conforms to (e.g., A
> or AA).
>
> EXAMPLE 1: A basic conformance statement
>
> In this example, the EPUB creator is stating that their publication
> conforms to the EPUB Accessibility 1.1 specification at WCAG 2.1 Level AA.
>
> <package …>
>
>    <metadata …>
>
>      …
>
>       <meta
>
>           property="dcterms:conformsTo"
>
>           id="conf">
>
>          EPUB-A11Y-11_WCAG-21-AA
>
>       </meta>
>
>       …
>
>    </metadata>
>
>   …
>
> </package>
>
> The following conformance strings are valid as of publication of this
> specification:
>
> • EPUB-A11Y-11_WCAG-20-A
>
> • EPUB-A11Y-11_WCAG-20-AA
>
> • EPUB-A11Y-11_WCAG-20-AAA
>
> • EPUB-A11Y-11_WCAG-21-A
>
> • EPUB-A11Y-11_WCAG-21-AA
>
> • EPUB-A11Y-11_WCAG-21-AAA
>
> NOTE
>
> The list of valid conformance strings will increase as W3C releases new
> versions of WCAG.
>
> In addition, WCAG 3.0 is set to introduce new level names (currently
> Bronze, Silver and Gold). Those names will likely replace A, AA, and AAA in
> the string pattern, but conformance will be addressed after that
> specification becomes a W3C Recommendation.
>
>    1. Outline of our Accessibility Summary
>
> Begin Outline
>
> Abstract
>
> Status of this document
>
> Table of Contents (automatically generated)
>
> Introduction
>
> Note: Reference to the User Experience guide.
>
> Principles 1: – I was thinking this would be a restatement/pointer to the
> Schema.org definition of the accessibility Summary
>
> Principles 2: I thought this would be a description of the presentation of
> the accessibility metadata presented through the User Experience Guide,
> i.e., this is all the accessibility metadata that is normally identified.
>
> Principle 3: This would reference the conformance metadata statements
> referenced above, e.g.       <meta
>
>           property="dcterms:conformsTo"
>
>           id="conf">
>
>          EPUB-A11Y-11_WCAG-21-AA
>
>       </meta>
>
>
>
> Before you start writing
>
> Some High-level Considerations
>
> What to include in the Accessibility Summary Guide
>
> Examples
>
>
>
> End of outline
>
>
>
> George Kerscher is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.
>
>
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-- 
*John Foliot* |
Senior Industry Specialist, Digital Accessibility |
W3C Accessibility Standards Contributor |

"I made this so long because I did not have time to make it shorter." -
Pascal "links go places, buttons do things"

Received on Thursday, 18 August 2022 15:00:02 UTC