About time someone added a comment about this video. Too often when you ask about web accessibility, the knee-jerk response is 'fonts and colours'. But accessibility is SO much more! I send this video to everyone when I'm trying to get the message across - it explains the whole gamut of accessibility better than any boring web pages or formal guidelines.
If you use an image, you should ALWAYS use Alt Text. If it is empty, a blind user does not know whether or not they are being denied something of value. If the image is so insipid you think there is no value in adding Alt Text, you shouldn't be using an image at all. This is terrible advice you give.
We're happy you found this useful! Can I ask what you mean by Save? Our permissions say you should be able to save to a playlist, or even download for offline use. Do either of those not work for you?
If only hackers and scam artists would adopt accessibility standards, we could go back to the simpler things. I agree account verification and 2FA can be brutal for AT users. Do you have a solution apart from everyone having a smartphone with face or fingerprint recognition? In the Mac world, when a required code is received via text, the computer or iOS device can automatically populate a code field if you are signed in with your Apple ID. This is the best solution I can I've seen.
Very good and informative video. I'm refactoring right now page to be align with accessibility and for our dropdowns I implemented it exacly how you told in the video NOT TO DO IT :D I read W3C Navigation Menu Button Example are their patterns wrong? I feel kinda sad right now tbh XD
If the 2FA code is sent via email, it will pass the requirements as it stands today, because that can be cut/pasted on the primary device. The big ban is on the manual transcription from one device to another.