- From: Jason White <jasonw@ariel.ucs.unimelb.edu.au>
- Date: Thu, 24 Oct 2002 16:47:33 +1000
- To: Web Content Guidelines <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>
The principal reason why all review requirements have been placed at level 2 in earlier drafts is the concern that, in making a conformance claim, an individual or organization might incur liability in virtue of having made a warranty regarding the accessibility of web content. Now that we no longer require (except perhaps at level 3, as discussed in a recent meeting) that conformance claims actually be published (or made public), this justification for restricting review requirements to level 2 is no longer valid. One can simply meet the requirements but keep the conformance claim private. Note that WCAG 1.0 does not require publication of conformance claims (cf., the discussion of "closet conformance claims" following the publication of WCAG 1.0 as a Recommendation), so we would not be departing from precedent. I also think that the warranty argument is suspect on its own terms. All one is claiming is that a review has been conducted and produced certain results, not that a third party carrying out such a review would arrive at the same conclusion.
Received on Thursday, 24 October 2002 02:47:41 UTC