Sveta Kouznetsova talks about the importance of transcripts and captions
A11y Rules Soundbites - Un pódcast de Nicolas Steenhout
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Sveta tells us "We are often told that bad captions are better than nothing, but they cause cognitive dissonance for us [deaf folks]." Thanks to Tenon for sponsoring the transcript for this episode. Transcript Nic: Hi, I’m Nic Steenhout. You’re listening to the Accessibility Rules Soundbite, a series of short podcasts where people with disabilities explain their impairments and what barriers they encounter on the web. Thanks to Tenon for sponsoring the transcript for this episode. Tenon provide accessibility as a service. They offer testing, training, and tooling to help fix accessibility fast. Nic: Today I'm talking with Svetlana Kouznetsova. Hi Sveta! Sveta: Hi Nic - nice meeting you! Nic: Nice meeting you, Sveta. We've been talking on twitter a bit so it's nice to meet you. Nic: For our audience out there, I should explain how we're doing this. Sveta is deaf, so we're typing back and forth and my colleague Emily Lewis is Sveta's voice. This is an interesting way do podcasting. There's always a way to figure out how to make things happen. Nic: Sveta, could you tell us a bit about your disability, if you even consider it a disability? Sveta: There are several words. Some people use “impairment”, some use “disability”. I personally don’t like the word “impairment”. And so do many other people with disabilities. I prefer “disability” to “impairment". We feel that it’s part of medical model of disability and the word was coined by nondisabled folks who look at us as broken or defective and in need to be fixed. Nic: Amen. Sveta: For example, we deaf people don’t like to be called “hearing impaired” or hear word “hearing impairment". Even international organizations of deaf and hard of hearing people made the agreement not to use the word “hearing impairment”. My disability is deafness. I have been profoundly deaf in both ears since the age 2 - after contracting meningitis. I grew up wearing hearing aids and got a cochlear implant 21 years ago. Due to several reasons I’m not going in detail here due to the time limit, I can recognize only environmental sounds with my cochlear implant and cannot understand speech by listening only. Nic: Thank you for that :) Sveta: I can speak, but I have limited l lipreading abilities and can lipread only certain people and cannot follow group conversations. Lipreading gives only about 30% of visual information and the rest is lots of guesswork. Nic: It might be interesting at some point to explore that because most people don't understand cochlear implants. Sveta: So it’s frustrating for me when people ask me if I can lipread - especially after I ask them to write down what they say. Sveta: Captions, written information, and sign language provide me more access to verbal communication and aural information. Nic: That's not the first time I hear that from someone who is deaf. Sveta: Talking about cochlear implant will take a lot of time. :) Nic: So we're talking about web accessibility today. What would you say is the biggest barrier you encounter on the web? Sveta: For me, a deaf person, it’s a lack of proper captions and transcripts for aural content. Like videos, podcasts, webinars, etc. It’s especially frustrating when non-disabled people talk about accessibility yet don’t make their content accessible for us deaf and hard of hearing people. Also there are different types of captioning access that follow different sets of quality guidelines and provided by different types of specialists. For example, live captions are not the same as video captions and transcripts. Many people think that auto captions and speech technologies solve those problems, but they are not an acceptable accessibility solution. Nic: Craptions! Sveta: We are often told that bad captions are better than nothing, but they cause cognitive dissonance for us. In the same way bad audio makes hearing people feel frustrated. We won’t tell them that bad audio i