- From: John Foliot <john@foliot.ca>
- Date: Mon, 16 Jan 2023 17:46:04 -0500
- To: matt.garrish@gmail.com
- Cc: John Foliot <john@foliot.ca>, Avneesh Singh <avneesh.sg@gmail.com>, public-epub3@w3.org, public-publishingcg@w3.org, epub-higher-education@lists.daisy.org
- Message-ID: <CAFmg2sVAq_5BJTYpbRGT3_rRy6xfUsMFrV7UgvNeyqds4HkY5A@mail.gmail.com>
LOL... gotcha. Ya, if you squint the right way, one could certainly fail it because "...you've created, or created the impression, that the text is something it is not" under SC 1.3.1, because 1.3.1 is all interpretation with no actual measurable requirements. (Again, you are taking an inference - actually a negative inference - from the normative text, which is far less precise.) Sadly however, while you and I may agree on this interpretation, that is not a given for all - I'm fairly certain we could find someone to disagree with our interpretation somewhere. (And while I've not conducted any kind of search, I'd be curious to know if anyone reading this had ever done that before, failed a similar use case using the reasoning you presented.) JF On Mon, Jan 16, 2023 at 5:23 PM <matt.garrish@gmail.com> wrote: > > OMG, that is the worst SC known to man, as it is both vague, broad, and > open to all sorts of interpretations. > > > > Fully agree with you! > > > > > *But the real issue is that what it *appears* to be conveying is in > fact not true* > > > > Right, I probably wasn’t clear but this is what I was asking. If you tag a > sample URL as a hyperlink, or even style it to look like it’s active, isn’t > that a violation of 1.3.1? You’ve created, or created the impression, that > the text is something it is not. > > > > I consider it like using heading tags for formatting. > > > > Matt > > > > *From:* John Foliot <john@foliot.ca> > *Sent:* January 16, 2023 5:28 PM > *To:* matt.garrish@gmail.com; Avneesh Singh <avneesh.sg@gmail.com> > *Cc:* John Foliot <john@foliot.ca>; public-epub3@w3.org; > public-publishingcg@w3.org; epub-higher-education@lists.daisy.org > *Subject:* Re: Seeking *opinions* as part of a larger research issue. > > > > Thanks Matt! > > Your suggestion of using <code> tags is both interesting and helpful. Will > mull that one over a bit more and take back to the team. > > As to whether this is addressed in SC 1.3.1 - OMG, that is the worst SC > known to man, as it is both vague, broad, and open to all sorts of > interpretations. That SC normatively states: > > > > Information, structure <https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG21/#dfn-structure>, and > relationships <https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG21/#dfn-relationships> conveyed > through presentation <https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG21/#dfn-presentation> can > be programmatically determined > <https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG21/#dfn-programmatically-determinable> or are > available in text. > > > > Now, the issue is multi-fold here: first, even if www.FakeUrl.com > isn't authored with anchor tags, the "fakeurl.com" bit visible on > screen *IS* "...available in text" - text that even screen readers would > hear. So it's not a failure in MHO. > > > > And in the inverse - .if the text string links to nothing but still > appears and acts like a link - it would be hard to argue that it wasn't > conveying *something* via presentation that is also programmatically > available due to the <a> element being used (styled or unstyled, as > user-agents or CSS generally styles the <a> element differently than > non-link text). *But the real issue is that what it *appears* to be > conveying is in fact not true* - but the "is it true and/or accurate" > part is not part of the normative text... > > > But most importantly, when a content author writes "www.FakeUrl.com" > there is an author-intent there that is not explicitly code-determinable: > It *MAY* be conveying a relationship through presentation (i.e it is an > actual link - unstyled it would be blue with the text underlined), or it > may just be conveying a text string in a format that has no specific > relationship to anything else, but is instead just *an editorial example*. > Parsing engines and accessibility testing tools could never be fully sure > of the author intent (which is why your suggestion of using <code> piqued > my interest, as it would be one method for the author to convey the intent > - at least partially). > > I think I may take this back to Avneesh and the ePub Accessibility TF - > there may be some real meat on this bone to craft a new requirement (or at > least a Best Practice) around. > > JF > > > > On Mon, Jan 16, 2023 at 2:58 PM <matt.garrish@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hi John, > > > > > should those text strings STILL be marked up as hyperlinks? > > > > Technically, you can markup them up as inactive hyperlinks (a without an > href), but your first example doesn’t really even qualify as that. I > wouldn’t do anything special with dummy URLs, to be honest, except maybe > mark them with code tags. > > > > Doesn’t this fall under 1.3.1 info and relationships, though? When you > have text that only looks like a URL but is not meant to be followed, > marking it as a hyperlink would seem to violate the principle (i.e., it > adds info that doesn’t actually exist). I don’t know if that SC makes > unnecessary tagging a violation – I’ve always seen it enforced for adding > missing structure – but there’s an argument that it should capture > misapplied tagging. It’s probably not something we’d take up in the EPUB > accessibility spec, as it’s not specific to ebooks. > > > > Agree with everything you’ve already said about the annoyance and > confusion factors. I’d only add that it’s annoying to everyone, not just > persons with disabilities. It makes you wonder if there is some reason why > the link is there and whether you should follow it just to see where it > goes. > > > > Matt > > > > *From:* John Foliot <john@foliot.ca> > *Sent:* January 16, 2023 2:10 PM > *To:* public-epub3@w3.org; public-publishingcg@w3.org; > epub-higher-education@lists.daisy.org > *Subject:* Seeking *opinions* as part of a larger research issue. > > > > The use-cases are pretty simple: > 1) an ePub book has text content on the page that is a URL (i.e. it quite > literally reads "www.examplesite.com"). The URL does not (and is not > expected to) actually resolve anywhere, it's just an example or placeholder > text. > 2) an ePub book has content on the page that was once an active hyperlink, > but the link no longer exists. > > The question is: for both of those use-cases (where the "print" is > offering up a text string formatted as an URL, but there is no actual URL > to resolve to), should those text strings STILL be marked up as hyperlinks? > > From a strict conformance to WCAG perspective… well, WCAG is silent on > this specific topic (and so it seems is ePub Accessibility 1.1). > I strongly suspect that there are arguments for both sides of the > discussion (“should all printed URL’s be active links”?), but I am > currently backing the perspective that having users (readers) follow > inactive links (or presenting users with inactive links to follow), > a) potentially places negative cognitive strain and confusion on some > users, > b) potentially demands unnecessary interactions (clicking a useless link) > that could be problematic for mobility impaired users, and > c) delivers zero quality for any effort invested by the user. > > My questions are: > 1) do you agree or disagree with my reasoning? (If you disagree, might I > ask for your counter-argument please?) > > 2) have you encountered this before? If you have, can you tell me what you > ended up doing? In particular, if you work in EDU (office of accommodation, > etc.) where ePub remediation is part of your work/tasks, do you have a > 'standard' policy or solution to either of these use cases? > > 3) any other thoughts or comments? (Note: we're looking for a solution > that is also scalable, FWIW) > > Thanks in advance for any feedback! > > > JF > > -- > > *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" > > > > > -- > > *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" > -- *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 Monday, 16 January 2023 22:46:32 UTC