Conformance next steps #121
Replies: 8 comments 31 replies
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1. Required plus percentage of enhanced provisions / guidelinesLevel 1: Baseline (PreReq + Baseline) |
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LevelsEach requirement currently in Enhanced level is sub-categorised into levels, so you have to pass all of a level before you can move up to the next level. Like having a WCAG 2 A, AA, AAA, AAAA. AAAAA. Level 1: Baseline (PreReq + Baseline) |
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3. HybridThis is a hybrid model of the previous two, where the group selects certain provisions / guidelines that must be included at level 2 and another set for level 3, but leaves the rest to the author. Also, with informative documentation it could allow for specific regulators or sector-based organisations to mark certain provisions / guidelines as required at each level, independently of W3C/WCAG. Level 1: Baseline (PreReq + Baseline) |
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4. Required plus percentage across functional needsAll levels above level 1 include a certain percentage of outcomes, AND a minimum percentage of provisions / guidelines for each functional need. Level 1: Baseline (PreReq + Baseline) |
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For all of these -- in order to assess them I think we will need
and then we need to try to populate them and see which ones work and which break down ??? |
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All of these are too complicated. WCAG has already the reputation of being too complicated. Having people who comply to pick and choose from a set of requirements or a percentage of requirements also means Level 2 or whatever does not mean the same on different pages. One site could implement Level 1 + ABC while the other would do Level 1 + GHI. I also have no interest in becoming an accessibility accountant. The administrative overhead of many audits is already significant to no benefit to users or clients. These things need to be simpler, not more complex. I also see min-maxing going on, where people will pick easy to get requirements to get over the % and miss others. But the most likely outcome is that nobody would bother to care for more than Level 1. WCAG AA only got real traction when it was required by law. Maybe we can make sure the base WCAG is good enough that we don’t need additional levels? My idea would be to have WCAG, the core principles, as a standard without any levels. Requirements that would be in levels would be in different modules that you can be compliant against. This would free the modules from hard pass/fail requirements, and also make identifying websites using modules fairly easy. A WCAG+EasyLang website would always meet WCAG core and the easy language requirements. WCAG+EasyLang+SignLang would include sign language. Over time, module requirements could shift into the core, raising the floor for accessibility. In addition, modules could incubate and adapt more easily as separate identities. |
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Summary 16 October[chair hat on] Trying to pull together the conversations up to now (October 15th 8:00 am Eastern)
An additional suggestion of a baseline + modules above baseline was made within conversation with 7 thumbs up on the suggestion. It seems like there is general support for the following, which we can discuss in today's meeting:
Concerns and questions that to note include:
Next steps would include:
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The group has been discussing which 1 or 2 conformance model(s) we will be exploring over the next 6 months.
Note: Within each conformance model that we decide to explore that uses percentages, we will try both points and percentages.
Reminder that the up arrows do not do anything in this process.
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