- From: Paul Cotton <Paul.Cotton@microsoft.com>
- Date: Tue, 13 Mar 2012 16:08:45 +0000
- To: "Janina Sajka <janina@rednote.net> (janina@rednote.net)" <janina@rednote.net>, "Judy Brewer <jbrewer@w3.org> (jbrewer@w3.org)" <jbrewer@w3.org>, "Michael Cooper (cooper@w3.org)" <cooper@w3.org>, "Michael(tm) Smith (mike@w3.org)" <mike@w3.org>
- CC: Sam Ruby <rubys@intertwingly.net>, "public-html@w3.org" <public-html@w3.org>, "public-html-a11y@w3.org" <public-html-a11y@w3.org>
The Chairs have not seen any kind of respond to our Feb 22 review of the second reopen request for ISSUE-31b [alt-location]. See below and: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html/2012Feb/0293.html If a revised change proposal is not received for this re-open request by Fri Mar 23 the Chairs plan to mark ISSUE-31b [alt-location] as POSTPONED as per our original notification in: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html/2012Jan/0099.html /paulc HTML WG co-chair Paul Cotton, Microsoft Canada 17 Eleanor Drive, Ottawa, Ontario K2E 6A3 Tel: (425) 705-9596 Fax: (425) 936-7329 -----Original Message----- From: Sam Ruby [mailto:rubys@intertwingly.net] Sent: Wednesday, February 22, 2012 5:24 AM To: public-html@w3.org Subject: Review of second reopen request for issue 31b [alt-location] Despite the extension of the 48 hour consensus call (see bottom of this email for dates and link), the chairs have decided to provide this feedback early. === The Change Proposal identifies four points of potential new information: 1. "a pattern of rejected bugs relating to the content of the text alternative advice in HTML5" As evidence, 5 bugs were identified. Relevant portion of the original decision: This objection lists 4 bugs with specifics; bugs which were not raised separately as issues, but for which the only remedy advocated is to remove large amounts of text from the HTML5 spec and also remove the entire "HTML5: Techniques for providing useful text alternatives" document. What is missing is any evidence that these issues couldn't be raised, and that they couldn't be resolved per the current Decision Process. Lacking such evidence, this objection was found to be weak. Evaluating the bugs listed: bugs 9215 and 9216 were in fact one of the original four listed in the survey, and as such are not new information. Bug 13651 was escalated as issue-202, which was subsequently deferred due to a lack of change proposals. Bug 9077 was raised as issue 122, and fixed. Bug 14937 was raised as issue 190 and is currently awaiting a counter proposal. As no evidence was presented that these issues couldn't be resolved per the current Decision Process, the new information presented would not likely to have materially affect the decision. Furthermore, despite quoting from the original decision, this Change Proposal fails to "identify a solution that specifically addresses the underlying causes". The closest we could find in in the Rationale section "difficulty in gaining traction". Failure to gain traction for a proposal is not sufficient technical justification for adopting that proposal. In a separate place in the Change Proposal, the following bugs were also listed: 9216, 9215, 8827, 8652, 8645, 7362. As previously mentioned, the first two were identified in the survey and addressed by the original decision. The remaining 4 were a part of the original issue 31. 2. "2 sets of contradictory normative requirements" WCAG 2.0 was adopted in December of 2008. As no new documents have been introduced since the original decision, this does not represent new information. At most, it merely is a restatement of the first objection. Relevant text from the first decision: This objection simply states that the examples should be in one place, and doesn't specify where that place should be. If there are examples that should be removed, we encourage specific bug reports. Lacking evidence of the right place for these examples to go, this objection was not found to be relevant to the decision at hand. Additionally, the first decision recognizes that there is a tradeoff between generic and modular specifications and providing documentation that contains all of the necessary advice for a specific element or attribute in one place. Quoting from the Change Proposal that originally was selected: Defining the requirements that apply to HTML's <img> element's alt="" attribute in the same specification as the requirements for the <img> element's src="" attribute makes it more likely that authors reading the requirements for src="" will see the requirements for alt="". As such, this point was not also found to contain new information sufficient to merit the reopening of this issue. 3. "majority of normative authoring requirements for alternative text currently contained within the HTML5 specification are not HTML5-specific" As evidence, one paragraph is cited which contains three specific references. In fact, these references are the exact same ones mentioned in the final quote included in the second point. As described above, this is a recognized trade-off as the proposed solution (i.e., the removal of recommendations intended for authors that make use of these attributes and elements) would make it less likely that those recommendations would be seen by those who would benefit from such. Again, this point was not found to contain new information sufficient to merit the reopening of this issue. 4. "The WCAG WG is more suited to development and vetting of the requirements and guidance of alternative text at this level, while the product of that development and vetting process can be equally available to developers using any specification." This fourth point starts out by restating portions of the third point. It then concludes by making a point that is uncontested: nobody is proposing that the WCAG WG stop producing WCAG documents. Again, this point was not found to contain new information sufficient to merit the reopening of this issue. Summary: We clearly have duplication and inconsistencies, and that is suboptimal. One way to proceed is to identify specific deviations and provide rationale as to why those sections should be changed. Citing new issues that have been resolved is not evidence that this is unworkable. If the preferred solution to this problem is to remove the text from the HTML 5 specification, what is needed is here is a proposal that doesn't merely cite bug numbers, but instead identifies root causes for these differences and identifies a change that addresses those root causes. Another approach would be to address head on the assertion that having information relevant to authors that make use of elements such as <img> and attributes such as alt="" in the same place as the definition of those elements is counter productive. The above two paragraphs are merely examples of the type of information that the chairs would consider as sufficient for reopening this issue. This list is not meant to be exhaustive. ==== History and Links The original deadline for reopen requests was February 11th: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html/2012Feb/0082.html Original Re-open request: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html/2012Feb/0139.html Chairs original response (request found to be incomplete): http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html-a11y/2012Feb/0121.html Plan to resubmit on Monday: http://www.w3.org/2012/02/16-html-wg-minutes.html#item10 48 hour consensus call (plus extension): http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html-a11y/2012Feb/0143.html http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html-a11y/2012Feb/0152.html Change Proposal: http://www.w3.org/html/wg/wiki/ChangeProposals/movealt Original Decision: http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html/2011Apr/0453.html - Sam Ruby
Received on Tuesday, 13 March 2012 16:09:38 UTC