By J.P., 21 April, 2013
Forum
Accessibility Advocacy
Hey Guys,
I am writing this post hoping to get signatures and feedback from you to send to Apple.
I really think that Apple should consider an accessibility rating for apps in the App Store. I'm starting this conversation not to slam Apple. We all know they dedicate the time to accessibility. I am writing this in frustration to the lack of support from developers.
There is no excuse anymore for an app not to be accessible. apple even provides certain tools for developers to make apps accessible. I think that developers should see some sort of accessibility rating to maybe embarrass them. If it is there for everyone to see, maybe they will implement needed changes.
I understand that there are developers who are dedicated to this cause. I however know I also send extensive emails to developers with no response. I also find it quite demeaning when I write the itunes store asking for a credit. Explaining the lack of accessibility in an app which is in their store. I'm not talking about partially inaccessible apps. We all know that there are some that aren't perfect, but you work around it. We all however have run into some which made no effort.
I think that a score maybe 1 to 5 would be perfect. From not accessible at all to completely accessible. Would you please help me in making Apple consider this. After receiving your responses, I'll pass this on to Apple. Thank you for taking a couple of minutes to do this.
Regards, JP
Comments
My responce
I think this is pointless
Logistics
Sorry, but never going to happen
Accessible apps
This wouldn't take away from
App Accessibility.
Accessibility for all apps?
An excellent idea.
We've been discussing this
here's my responce
Great idea but very unrealistic
A Similar, but Different, Approach
That's more like it!
Great Addition
My tuppence worth
I've already said this elsewhere, but I think that it is worth repeating here - from our experience here at AppleVis, I would have to say that developers are often the worst possible people to tell you about the accessibility of their apps.
On a daily basis we have developers trying to post their apps to the site or emailing us direct, and the number of these who show that they have no idea of what VoiceOver is and why it matters to the users of this site is extremely disappointing. When they use the form to try and post the app directly to the site's App Directory, we will regularly see comments that show all too clearly that they don't know what VoiceOver is and also have no concept of what accessibility means in the context that we use it. Their comments are often littered with contradictions - about labelling, element reading and the overall usability. Suffice to say, there is no way that you can rely on what they say. Which, of course, is why we do not allow developers to submit their own apps to this site's App Directories! The thought of the App Store being filled with this level of misinformation is not an attractive one. And, raising awareness to the level that would be necessary to avoid this would be a major endeavour and would probably still leave lots of developers who simply wouldn't have the time or inclination to take much notice of whatever information was being provided to them about VoiceOver support and accessibility. In this situation, you would have to ask whether no information is better than misinformation. I also cannot see how human testing of apps is realistically possible. There are simply too many. Even if you didn't try to catalogue what is already in the App Store, and instead tested each new app or update that was submitted after the introduction of any system, I would guess that this is several thousand apps every day. To do this, you would need an absolute army of testers, all operating within strict guidelines to ensure that there was consistency within the testing and reporting. The financial costs and the potential time implications for the app approval system are almost certainly going to make this unviable. The only viable option that I can see, is one that automates the process. I have doubts that this is technically possible, but the knowledge necessary to back up that view is way beyond my pay grade (smile)What about more specific questions?