this post was submitted on 21 Jun 2023
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Reddit's API concessions were clearly not enough for the Blind community.
Spez didn't care, it was just a small negotiation so he doesn't come across as "fuck disabled people". It didn't work though, he has been a PR disaster.
I mean, it couldn't have worked as they clearly didn't even think about those communities in the first place, they had to be called out.
How is lemmy in terms of accessibility? I hope it goes well for them.
It's not great. The people running rblind.com have forked Lemmy and hope to remerge upstream at some point in the future. Their own fork has a number of outstanding issues: https://rblind.com/post/569070
Thank you. This is what I was thinking of. Lemmy/kbin is great but idk how mature they are in terms of accessibility. I wish them luck.
In general, Lemmy isn't as developed as Reddit. People are hoping that tools developed for Reddit can be easily reconfigured for Lemmy, but that isn't guaranteed.
I think I saw that someone's making a translation later of sorts so the Lemmy API is more like the reddit one, I suppose to help with easing migration.
With that being said... Lemmy is still a huge win for the /r/blind folks. Being able to fork the project puts the power to be better into their own hands. It's also another glowing endorsement to the power of federation that blind community members will be able to browse any Lemmy/Kbin community while still enjoying the benefits of their fork's accessibility enhancements.
The current state of the fork is already a better screenreader experience than browsing either version of the Reddit website. The fork has been running for 8 days compared to /r/blind being founded 15 years ago. I repeat my previous statement: their fork is already a better in-browser experience. What more needs to be said?
On that note, the developer of the iOS lemmy app mlem has said that he's focusing on blind accessibility every step of the process during development and will be hiring accesibility consultants to make sure he gets it right.
Lemmy advantage is that it's both open source and federated. Someone can make a version with accessibility feature (which will likely be integrated into main version) and deploy an instance for blind users. Blind users will then have access to the whole fediverse.
At least Mlem, the app for iOS is explicitly compatible to all accessibility functions in iOS. They wrote in their latest changelog that they have someone auditing their app to be compatible with this stuff.