Amazon cannot from an access standpoint *force* anyone to accommodate
their body as Amazon sees fit. I suspect instead they have a toking
blind person and have decided to project that individual onto others,
even those using things like voice browsers due to dexterity challenges
..as if blindness is the only disability in existence. What is equally
disturbing
is how customer service cannot directly reach individuals on the
accessibility team, assuming there is more than one person.
Using image based verification have been considered poor from a w3c
perspective for many years. Why amazon still uses them is anyone's
guess.
On Fri, 23 Aug 2019, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
Well, are you implying I should be forced to run a graphical screen-reader
such as Orca, so I can shop at Amazon? I suppose if there were something much
better than Orca, I would certainly try it out. My Wife wants me to
try-and-shop at Amazon from a Chrome Book. I will experiment.
Chime
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