Today, 3 December, marks the International Day of Persons with Disabilities (IDPD), a day when we celebrate the contributions of people with disabilities and renew our commitment to building a more inclusive world.
At the Internet Society, this day holds special meaning because it reminds us that our vision—”the Internet is for everyone”—can only become reality when we actively work to remove barriers that exclude people with disabilities from full participation online.
Why Online Accessibility Matters
According to the World Health Organization, approximately 16% of the global population—about 1.3 billion people—experience significant disability. For many of these individuals, the Internet represents a pathway to education, employment, healthcare, social connection, and civic participation. Yet too often, inaccessible websites, applications, and digital content create barriers that prevent people with disabilities from accessing these opportunities.
When we design online spaces without accessibility in mind, we’re not just excluding individuals—we’re depriving our global community of diverse perspectives, talents, and innovations that could help solve some of our most pressing challenges. As I’ve said many times, we need everyone engaged if we are to address the complex problems facing our world today.
Our Commitment to Accessibility
At the Internet Society and Internet Society Foundation, we take our responsibility seriously to ensure that our own digital properties, programs, and initiatives are accessible to everyone, including people with disabilities. As part of this commitment, our Board of Trustees approved a policy in April 2023 around building a culture of accessibility across our organizations, and in November 2024 the Board approved an Accessibility Operational Framework and a Website Accessibility Plan that we are now executing.
Over the past year, we’ve made significant progress in building accessibility into everything we do. Our main Internet Society and Internet Society Foundation websites now score very highly in automated testing, meeting WCAG 2.2 Level AA compliance standards. This means the new content we’re producing is accessible from the start, not as an afterthought.
But our work goes beyond our own websites. We’re now prominently encouraging grant recipients for local Internet Governance Forum events to use the IGF Dynamic Coalition on Accessibility and Disability (DCAD) Accessibility Guidelines, helping to ensure that Internet governance discussions around the world are inclusive of people with disabilities. Our Internet Society Foundation continues to fund projects such as Bangladesh’s first fully accessible online graphic design course for youth with hearing and speech disabilities.
We’ve also made our educational resources more accessible. Almost all courses in our learning management system have been reviewed and are Voluntary Product Accessibility Template (VPAT) certified, with all new courses being developed for WCAG compliance. We even offer a specialized course called “Disability Leadership Training in Internet Governance and Digital Rights,” developed in partnership with our Accessibility Standing Group.
Our global chapters are deeply involved in this work as well. Just in this year, our Hong Kong Chapter hosted a day about cybersecurity and how AI can be used for scams, with sessions for people with disabilities. Our Benin Chapter collaborated with our Accessibility Standing Group to organize a session on “digital accessibility for people with disabilities.” Our Bosnia and Herzegovina Chapter organized Internet safety training for blind students. And our Zimbabwe Chapter has facilitated basic information technology skills training for over 598 disabled individuals in the Binga community. These are just a few stories of the many lives being changed by the work of our chapters.
Our commitment extends to how we work internally as well. Staff have fully-accessible templates for office products with guidelines for creating accessible documents, and we’re planning more detailed accessibility training for staff.
Three Steps You Can Take
Creating a more accessible Internet requires action from all of us—individuals, organizations, governments, and technology companies alike. Here are three concrete steps you can take to contribute:
1. Learn about accessibility standards and implement them. Familiarize yourself with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG). Whether you’re creating a website, developing an app, or simply posting content online, these guidelines provide clear criteria for making digital content accessible. Start by ensuring your content has proper heading structure, alternative text for images, sufficient color contrast, and keyboard navigation support.
2. Include people with disabilities from the beginning. When designing online products, services, or policies, include people with disabilities in the process from the start—not just at the end for testing. Their lived experience provides invaluable insights that can’t be replicated through guidelines alone. As the disability rights movement has long emphasized: “Nothing about us without us.”
3. Advocate for accessibility in your sphere of influence. Whether you’re making purchasing decisions for your organization, participating in policy discussions, or contributing to open-source projects, make accessibility a priority. Ask vendors about their accessibility commitments, encourage your organization to adopt accessibility policies, and support initiatives that promote digital inclusion for people with disabilities.
Looking Ahead
As we observe this International Day of Persons with Disabilities, let’s remember that accessibility isn’t just about compliance or checking boxes—it’s about ensuring that the Internet truly fulfills its promise as a resource that enriches everyone’s lives and serves as a force for good in society.
The work of building an accessible Internet is ongoing, and we’re committed to continuing our efforts in 2026 and beyond. But we can’t do it alone. It will take all of us—working together across stakeholder groups, borders, and disciplines—to ensure that people with disabilities can fully participate in our online society.
Only then can we truly fulfill our vision that “the Internet is for everyone.”
Learn more about our work at www.internetsociety.org and visit the UN International Day of Persons with Disabilities for resources and ways to get involved. If you are an Internet Society member, you can join our Accessibility Standing Group.
Image © Internet Society Zimbabwe Chapter