My understanding was that they could read the text on the video, is that not true?
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LA Legault 🍉 (lalegault@newsie.social)'s status on Tuesday, 14-Nov-2023 16:11:38 JST LA Legault 🍉 -
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Aral Balkan (aral@mastodon.ar.al)'s status on Tuesday, 14-Nov-2023 16:11:35 JST Aral Balkan @LALegault @ProcessParsnip As far as I know, not the text that’s displayed in the video itself (burned into it). They could, there is no technical barrier to performing OCR on video in real-time but not sure if any do. Best to include a description of the video in the alt text to be sure. Tagging #a11y and #accessibility in case anyone with more specific knowledge of video accessibility has better information to add.
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LA Legault 🍉 (lalegault@newsie.social)'s status on Tuesday, 14-Nov-2023 16:11:36 JST LA Legault 🍉 I make sure everything I post has subtitles, can screen readers not read them?
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Aral Balkan (aral@mastodon.ar.al)'s status on Tuesday, 14-Nov-2023 20:22:03 JST Aral Balkan @aardrian Thanks, Adrian.
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Adrian Roselli (aardrian@toot.cafe)'s status on Tuesday, 14-Nov-2023 20:22:05 JST Adrian Roselli @aral @LALegault @ProcessParsnip
I cannot see the original post (only a reply), but captions are for users with hearing and/or language needs. They are a visual affordance that are not helpful to blind users.For low-vision users, closed captions can be scaled, colored, back-plated, etc. Open captions are burned into the video frames and cannot be adjusted.
A screen reader has no reason to access closed captions since that would conflict with audio from the video.
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