- From: Nat Tarnoff <nat.tarnoff@levelaccess.com>
- Date: Thu, 11 Apr 2024 13:33:11 +0000
- To: Jennifer Strickland <jstrickland@mitre.org>, Roberto Scano <mail@robertoscano.info>, Todd Libby <toddlibby@protonmail.com>
- CC: "Patrick H. Lauke" <redux@splintered.co.uk>, "WCAG list (w3c-wai-gl@w3.org)" <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <SJ0PR22MB3415AACFCA7B5E423910A44BF4052@SJ0PR22MB3415.namprd22.prod.outlook.com>
TL;DR - Until humans as a whole have the capacity to think of others before themselves, AI will not be trust worthy to do the job of a human where emotions are involved. "Saying that something can’t be done in the future because it failed in the past or can't be done now is like saying that "man will never be able to fly" in the 1800’s when they couldn’t….yet. " This statement is accurate for things like planes, cars, computers, but I don't think it applies to AI. The reason I say this is that AI requires learning and training which is done by humans exposing the AI to human creations. Humans are fallible. We've seen this in cameras that can't focus on darker skin, in AI that was trained off Twitter and turned harmful in 24 hours, and in people taking over or creating companies that promote and thrive on hate speech. That point is made by your P.S. mentioning how bad the state of alt text is currently. Alt text isn't new. With decades of its existence and people still haven't learned. I also think that while we have ML intelligent tools that can determine some of what is in a picture, giving alt text to an image that describes the image is often the wrong alt text. It won't deliver the meaning or emotion the image generates when in context. The difference might be "a bouquet of roses" versus "Our vibrant red and yellow roses are the perfect gift for your someone special". While technically accessible in the first count, the second is much more meaningful and effective. On the off chance AI can give more in depth information, I don't think it is going to get the feeling a human can provide until it is Turing complete. Nat Tarnoff (they/them) ________________________________ From: Jennifer Strickland <jstrickland@mitre.org> Sent: Thursday, April 11, 2024 8:01 AM To: Roberto Scano <mail@robertoscano.info>; Todd Libby <toddlibby@protonmail.com> Cc: Patrick H. Lauke <redux@splintered.co.uk>; WCAG list (w3c-wai-gl@w3.org) <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org> Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: AI and the future of Web accessibility Guidelines CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. First, I agree with Todd and Patrick that AI will not be able to do the work of accessibility any time soon if every. Second, the reality is that people will look for any shortcut and for many it will be easier to say let AI do it instead of learning to deliver accessibility. We need to be clearer in our guidelines to make it easier for people to understand how to make things accessible. We also need to address the use of AI, because people will jump to the seemingly easy route to meet accessibility without learning how to do it. From: Roberto Scano <mail@robertoscano.info> Date: Thursday, April 11, 2024 at 2:06 AM To: Todd Libby <toddlibby@protonmail.com> Cc: Patrick H. Lauke <redux@splintered.co.uk>, WCAG list (w3c-wai-gl@w3.org) <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org> Subject: [EXT] Re: AI and the future of Web accessibility Guidelines Agreed. Same issue of Google is happened with an e-commerce web site with mistake for gluten-free and with gluten. In this case the damage can be higher. . . Il gio 11 apr 2024, 03: 22 Todd Libby <toddlibby@ protonmail. com> ha scritto: I agree Agreed. Same issue of Google is happened with an e-commerce web site with mistake for gluten-free and with gluten. In this case the damage can be higher... Il gio 11 apr 2024, 03:22 Todd Libby <toddlibby@protonmail.com<mailto:toddlibby@protonmail.com>> ha scritto: I agree fully with Patrick: > Once you bring in the "AI will do it" line of thinking, we may as well > just remove any author requirement, and WCAG becomes just a list of > requirements for AI user agents to massage any old web content into > something accessible. Being a strong supporter against AI, because it will never work for accessibility, we have been down this road before. I mean, Google attempted their best shot and look where it got them. In hot water (so to speak). https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/jul/01/google-sorry-racist-auto-tag-photo-app and if we are ever going to learn something as a people (which we have not), instances like this will always be why I vehemently oppose AI in tech and accessibility. The article may be old, but the fact remains that AI is not the answer now (or ever in my opinion). --- Best, Todd Libby On Thursday, April 4th, 2024 at 8:08 AM, Patrick H. Lauke <redux@splintered.co.uk<mailto:redux@splintered.co.uk>> wrote: > On 04/04/2024 08:02, Gregg Vanderheiden RTF wrote: > > > I think much of our work is not forward-looking. > > > > We will soon have AI that can do a better job of text alternatives than > > humans can for example. > > And then it is unclear why we would require authors to do all this work. > > This applies to a LOT of things. > > > As a counterpoint, Gregg ... when does it end? You've stated similar > when it comes to things like authors needing to provide correct explicit > markup for headings, since (to paraphrase) "AI will be able to do it". > > Captions, audio descriptions ... "AI will be able to do it". > > Colour contrast issues? "AI can detect it and change it on the fly". > > Once you bring in the "AI will do it" line of thinking, we may as well > just remove any author requirement, and WCAG becomes just a list of > requirements for AI user agents to massage any old web content into > something accessible. > > P > -- > Patrick H. Lauke > > * https://www.splintered.co.uk/ > * https://github.com/patrickhlauke > * https://flickr.com/photos/redux/ > * https://mastodon.social/@patrick_h_lauke
Received on Thursday, 11 April 2024 13:34:14 UTC