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The VPAT was originally designed as a tool for vendors to document product compliance to Section 508 and facilitate government market research on ICT with accessible features. Many people started to call the completed document a "VPAT" but the wider procurement community would prefer to call it a product Accessibility Conformance Report, or ACR.
Federal agencies can be in legal compliance and still not meet the technical standards. Section 508 §1194.3 General exceptions describe exceptions for national security (e.g., most of the primary systems used by the National Security Agency (NSA)), incidental items not procured as work products, individual requests for non-public access, fundamental alteration of a product's key requirements ...
Voluntary Product Accessibility Template This page was last edited on 9 January 2024, at 21:19 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
Computer accessibility refers to the accessibility of computers to all people, regardless of disability or age-related limitations. The main article for this category is Computer accessibility . Subcategories
The access frontier approach distinguishes between users and non-users of a product or service, and segments non-users into four groups: [6] Those who are able to use the product or service but choose not to (voluntary non-users) Those who can currently access the product or service but do not yet (non-users, lying within the present access ...
Templates are sorted by their level of impact on accessibility: "1: detrimental", this template contains elements that must be accessible, in order to conform to A accessibility guidelines. "2: important", this template contains elements that should be accessible, in order to conform to AA accessibility guidelines.
The first web accessibility guideline was compiled by Gregg Vanderheiden and released in January 1995, just after the 1994 Second International Conference on the World-Wide Web (WWW II) in Chicago (where Tim Berners-Lee first mentioned disability access in a keynote speech after seeing a pre-conference workshop on accessibility led by Mike Paciello).
Web accessibility, or eAccessibility, [1] is the inclusive practice of ensuring there are no barriers that prevent interaction with, or access to, websites on the World Wide Web by people with physical disabilities, situational disabilities, and socio-economic restrictions on bandwidth and speed.