Threads launch fails to prioritize accessibility
mashable.comThe launch also excluded EU. Those are 450 million people.
In contrast, worldwide (including EU) there are 43 million blind people.
So acting outraged because the launch couldn't address everyone everywhere all at once is disingenuous. They're working on it. 70 million sign-ups in 2 days is not too shabby.
Accessibility is a time pit relevant to few people who are never happy.
Clearly you have no idea what you are talking about. But don't worry, you might not be a part of the disabled community right now, but one day you will. We all will. "It's a matter of when, not if."
I should stay away from this, but statistically most people die with their vision good enough to not need app accessibility feature. Specifically 0.1% of people aged 55-64 are blind and 3.9% of people aged 85 or older are blind or significantly visually impaired. Meaning over 96% of people pass away seeing.
I don't agree with OP, but I also don't agree with overdramatizing the problem at the expense of facts. There are dozens of millions of people worldwide who deserve accessibility app support of a major platform, like Facebook or Instagram, but lo and behold, Facebook and Instagram do support vision accessibility.
Threads, meanwhile... launched 2 days ago. They're not a major platform yet. They're only starting, and they'll be adding accessibility features in time.
I'm all in for a good and healthy discussion and we don't need to agree 100% or make which other agree.
That is the misconception about accessibility. It should not be design and developed *only* for severe disabilities. Add/support an option to increase the font size in 10%, for example, it is an accessibility feature. Have an alt text for an image when you're in a bad LTE spot, help you to not miss out but also it is a accessibility feature. It's still shocking for me that people don't realize how many things they use daily, only exists because the disabled community had to fight for it, like sidewalk ramps.
I don't agree with you about "they're only starting". They already have this tools and they know how to use it, because they are Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp. They didn't hire an entire team overnight, they reallocated people from the others platforms to work on this. So, IMHO they just choose to not implement the basic accessibility features.
Some of the features you mention are OS-level features and every app therefore offers them out of the box (like zoom in) without developer support.
As for them "choosing" not to implement certain accessibility features on launch, every launch involves choices. I don't know how you can tell me with a straight face that 40 million people with vision problems are more important than 400 million people in EU in term of prioritization. But you did, anyway.
As a developer, there's no such thing as "basic accessibility features" that just come with "the tools." You need to figure out a good UI, implement it, test it, set limits to preserve function but avoid abuse and so on.
Regarding ALT, I wonder, what stops accessibility mindful people to just describe the image in their post, for example? But I guess if you don't have it conveniently as ALT text on the image itself, then screw blind people, and skip directly to outrage.
People who need accessibility are important to consider, but they're not more important than other people who need to be considered. They're definitely not ten times more important than other people. I believe we're leaning here into this toxic outrage culture society has adopted, which promotes overreacting to issues of disability, race, sexual orientation. It's becoming increasingly unsustainable. I suppose it's natural for Mashable to be scrambling to cause some outrage for the clicks, but it's still on us to know better.
We're all people and we're all the same. No one's issues are more important than another person. Blind people deserve the same as everyone, but it just so happens in reality support for them is additional work, therefore that work will have to be done additionally. I'm in Europe and I have no access to the app at all, but I'm not complaining. GDPR requires additional work, and it'll have to be done additionally. I'll wait for Meta to get to me. Blind people can also survive without posting on Threads for a few months. Threads is not an essential service to absolutely anyone, especially 2 days out of the gate.