Jan. 25, 2025

Making Tech More Accessible with Crystal Preston-Watson

Making Tech More Accessible with Crystal Preston-Watson

If technology serves everybody, then everyone deserves access to a seat at the table. No one better embodies this sentiment than Crystal Preston-Watson. She’s a Senior Digital Accessibility Analyst with Salesforce, and she brings an unrivaled passion for making tech available for anyone to use.

On this episode of FAFO, we’re unpacking why her mission is so vital, and the previous career that made Crystal realize the disabled community needs a voice to advocate for them. Crystal goes into why it’s okay to turn personal struggles into triumphs for others, ARIA as a vital resource, and the issues with pushing GenAI tools onto accessibility tools.

You’ll also get to hear why Autumn loves Crystal’s presence on the internet, but especially Crystal’s blog (which is a great read if you love serious topics sprinkled with a good laugh).

Show Highlights

(0:00) Intro

(0:29) Tremolo sponsor read

(1:51) Introducing Crystal through the power of numeronym

(5:43) Crystal's journey to accessibility and software

(10:01) How Crystal’s background in tech led her directly to tech

(15:30) Using additional tools to help solve problems

(18:31) The power of lifting other people up through your own personal struggles

(21:53) The importance of the right to repair and accessibility in the disability community

(27:58) Rapid evolutions in accessibility, vulnerability, and security

(33:57) Tremolo sponsor read

(34:55) Changes Crystal has seen in accessibility

(39:04) Why ARIA is important to accessibility

(43:17) Can open source provide a voice for accessibility advocates?

(45:52) Audio accessibility tools and their many functions

(48:22) Who's better for accessibility: Apple or Android?

(51:42) GenAI's impact (or lack thereof) on accessibility

(57:33) Why Autumn loves Crystal's social media presence

(59:50) Where you can find more from Crystal

(1:01:04) Crystal's advice for making security more accessible

 

 

About Crystal Preston-Watson

Crystal is an accessibility engineer and analyst. She believes accessibility is a civic and human right, and she is passionate about building accessible and inclusive applications for everyone.

 

 

Links Referenced

Sponsor

Tremolo: http://fafo.fm/tremolo

Sponsor the FAFO Podcast!

http://fafo.fm/sponsor

Transcript

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Open-source is really important for—especially when it

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comes to assistive technology, and digital accessibility.

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Welcome to Fork Around and Find Out the podcast about

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building, running, and maintaining software and systems.

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Managing role-based access control for Kubernetes isn’t the

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easiest thing in the world, especially as you have more clusters,

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and more users, and more services that want to use Kubernetes.

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OpenUnison helps solve those problems by bringing

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single-sign on to your Kubernetes clusters.

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This extends Active Directory, Okta, Azure AD and other sources as

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your centralized user management for your Kubernetes access control.

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You can forget managing all those YAML files to give someone access

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to the cluster, and centrally manage all of their access in one place.

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This extends to services inside the cluster

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like Grafana, Argo CD and Argo Workflows.

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OpenUnison is a great open-source project, but relying

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on open-source without any support for something as

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critical as access management may not be the best option.

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Tremolo Security offers support for OpenUnison

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and other features around identity and security.

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Tremolo provides open-source and commercial support for OpenUnison

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in all of your Kubernetes clusters, whether in the cloud or on-prem.

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So, check out Tremolo Security for your single sign-on needs in Kubernetes.

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You can find them at fafo.fm/tremolo.

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That’s T-R-E-M-O-L-O.

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Welcome to F18T, or as you’d like to call

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it, Fork Around and Find Out, generally.

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I realized today that your name is also 18 numbers in between.

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So, C18N lines up perfectly with F18T.

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Autumn is looking at me as, like, the most—

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No.

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Craziest person in the world right now.

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[laugh]

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.
This is only second to the time when he showed

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up bald and scared this [BLEEP] out of me, okay

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[
laugh]

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?
For anyone that does not know, this is called a numeronym, all right?

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Numeronyms are used pretty commonly throughout—especially

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technology—where you take the middle letters of a word and

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you make a number, however many letters are in between.

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So, like, accessibility, right?

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That is A11Y.

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That is the very com—because people are freaking lazy, and they

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will not type it out, and so you do A11—like, Kubernetes, K8S.

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There are eight letters between the K and the S.

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Kubernetes is a numeronym, K8S for that.

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Internationalization, I18N.

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Observability, all these words they have numeronym representations.

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And I wanted to start off with that because Crystal is going to talk

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to us about accessibility and software, and I am super excited for it.

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Welcome to the show.

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Yay.

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Welcome.

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Thank you for— [laugh] having me.

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I did not know that [unintelligible] 18 between us [laugh]

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.
I wrote it out on my

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little piece of paper right here, and I counted the letters.

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I made sure.

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And so—

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That was news to me.

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Autumn, you’re still looking at me like [laugh] I am the craziest person [laugh]

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.
Look, I’m

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never sure if we’re going to get a dad joke, if we’ve gone down the

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neuro-spicy rabbit hole of a book, or if it’s like math majorness.

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Like, it just you never know what you’re going to get with Justin, okay?

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It’s just spelling today,

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and I can’t spell in my head, so I had to write it out.

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Don’t lie.

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That’s

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spelling and math.

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You put the numbers in everything.

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This is algebra.

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This is—

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I have to say, a lot of people use the—you know, especially

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for accessibility because when you’re hashtagging

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and like that, takes up a lot of, you know, valuable—

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Yeah,

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character counts we got to—

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Yeah, so I try to balance it out with, I’ll use

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accessibility the first time, and then I’m using A11Y.

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I know it makes some people mad, but I’m like, I need more.

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I have a lot to say [laugh]

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.
And

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like, that has been ingrained in me in every documentation ever written.

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Like, spell out the thing first and then use the acronym, right?

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And, like, you can do that—

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I’m glad it’s ingrained

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in you because the amount of people that throw around acronyms

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pretending like we’re all supposed to know what they’re talking about.

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I

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mean, in written context.

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If I’m writing a blog post or a documentation, something like

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that, the first time, I’m going to say—even at AWS, right?

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Like, AWS, you had to spell out Amazon Web Services the

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first time in official blog posts, and then you could

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say AWS, like, it was not allowed in a blog post or docs.

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I worked there for four years, and I still got blogs

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in review, and I haven’t worked there for two [laugh]

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.
[laugh]

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.
They’re never getting out, y’all [laugh]

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.
I once freelanced for a place, and then I left for, like, a year, and came

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back, and I got assigned tickets that I had put in a year before [laugh]

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.
[laugh]

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.
But they also didn’t realize I had left; they thought I was—

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Lazy [laugh]

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?
Just changed floors.

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Tell me somebody came back for a stupid edit, and

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was like, “Can you move the ‘the’ in this sentence?”

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When I left

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Disney, the last thing I did was, I was writing a blog post, and they wouldn’t

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let it go out because I left before it was, like, going to be published.

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And so, they changed all the author names and, like,

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put a little, like, tag line at the bottom, like, “This

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blog post had, like, credit to Justin,” or whatever.

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It’s like, no longer works here.

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Doesn’t that make you mad though

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because, like, in any big corporation, that one blog takes six to eight months

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of three people sitting on it, sending it back and forth, giving you the dumbest

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edits that don’t matter, and then they’ll be, like, “Oh well, like, you worked

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on this for two years, but goodbye.” Like, I was working there while you did it.

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It’s okay.

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They paid you.

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It’s fine.

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That’s my solace for everything [laugh]

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.
Crystal, so how did you get into focusing on accessibility in software?

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Why is that important?

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I want to just start there.

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Let’s go there.

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We have lots of other places to go.

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I got so much, like, rabbit-hole stuff that I’m going to talk about.

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We’re about to get so off topic, so let’s go there

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first.

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Well, to do a very shortened, around, like, ten

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years ago, one I started to really lose my vision.

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I’ve always had one [laugh] functional eye, but you know,

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my other eye, my left eye, kind of showed up and showed out.

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And it’s like, hey, you can still do everything.

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I’ll do everything that your right eye can’t do but then about ten

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years ago, I noticed I started to lose my, you know, my vision wasn’t,

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you know, I was getting glasses, and I’m like, that’s not working.

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Maybe it’s because I went to Lens Crafters and [laugh] the classes for $15.

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Maybe it’s that—come to find out I, you know, ended up

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getting—I have a visual impairment [laugh] that came about.

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And in conjunction with that, I was working

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as—I started out as a front-end developer.

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Originally, I worked in journalism, usually in

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the interactive departments of a few newspapers.

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And then I kind of—you know, journalism around 2009, 2010 I worked at a paper

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that had been open for 149 years, and closed right before its 150th year.

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And I’m like, I don’t know if this continuing on in journalism is probably good.

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So, I switched over to front-end development, which

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makes all the times that I skipped and dropped out of

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college to learn how to code and stuff, like, worth it.

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So, then I was doing front-end development, kind of, did

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it a little bit backwards and moved into quality assurance

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because I was like, this is kind of like journalism.

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Like I really, like, kind of discovering

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why something is not functioning correctly.

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So, I was doing that, and one day I was working for a company,

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and I got a ticket that said, test JAWS for this application.

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And I did not know what JAWS was, you know?

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I was, you know—overall, I had a, you know, kind of a little bit of familiarity

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with, you know, accessibility tools were, but not, like, the actual individuals.

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I didn’t have that much knowledge.

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And I’m like, what does that mean?

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So, after kind of trying to, one, figure out—and JAWS as

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a screen reader, just to let you know—and I would do the

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whole, like, it stands for… this because I completely forget.

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So, maybe can put a little asterisk of JAWS stands through

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this; Crystal forgot this while she was talking [laugh]

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.
That happens to me all the time.

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Even though she deals with

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the stuff every day, she forgot the acronym.

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Even the acronyms

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we absolutely know what they are, we do not remember all the time.

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That’s why I made Justin stop giving me acronym tests

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because I was like, “Justin… like, I know what it does.

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I don’t know why it’s named this.”

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Wait for this game for this month because it’s an acronym test.

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It’s a fun one.

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Do you see what I have to put up with, okay?

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Do you—like—I just—it’s ‘Job Access With Speech.’

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Yes, exactly.

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I deal with so many acronyms, like, throughout the day.

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I’m just, like, I all, I know, is I know what it does, and [laugh]

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I

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don’t even know how people

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got through life before Google, okay?

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Like, the amount of things I have to Google for acronyms between working in

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tech and being on dating apps, I’m always just, like, what are we talking

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about?

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[laugh]

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.
Like, are y’all just making up words at this point [laugh]

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?
I want to make

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a Venn diagram of that.

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I was on dating apps and I didn’t know what non—it

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took me a while to figure out non-ethical monogamy.

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Girl.

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They got, like, five names for that one thing, and I’m

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like,

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just says ‘wants to do everyone.’

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[laugh]

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.
The struggle out here is real [laugh]

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. See?

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We’re right here.

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You understand me.

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Okay, also, so did you—were you writing when you were a journalist?

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I kind of started out doing freelance.

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I worked for an alternative weekly here in Denver called Westword.

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And so, I was doing—I contributed a lot to the calendar section.

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So, it’s like, “Oh, go to this club or this band.”

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And then eventually I became the web editor.

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I was fired because it was one of those things of,

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like, your first really big-person job, and I’m like,

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I can’t really cry in the cubicle and keep [laugh] your

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job.

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Unless you work at Amazon.

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You can definitely cry [laugh]

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.
[laugh]

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.
I’ve got too much coffee this morning.

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Who let me on this show?

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[laugh]

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.
That was

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spicy.

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Oh,

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my gosh.

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[laugh]

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.
I

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can’t breathe.

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That one—to all of our ex-AWS colleagues out there, you know.

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But I guess not at newspapers, huh?

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They don’t like that.

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As a web editor, you’re not allowed to.

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The funny thing is, is that I was in conflict because some of the

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higher-ups, because they had moved from WordPress to Movable Type.

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And I was like, “Why did you do that?” I don’t know why because I was like,

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“Well, if you want your reporters to actually contribute to online”—because

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this was, like, back in 2007, and so you didn’t have a lot of reporters they

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were really contributing to, like, writing online, like, for blogs and stuff.

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And I was like, “Maybe we can go back to

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WordPress.” They were like, “No.” I know.

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Now, I’m like, I feel vindicated because no one—when I

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mention Movable Type, people are, like, “What is that?”

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Not just that, but I mean this, like, let’s just be real.

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The only reason Wordpress is still a thing is because they

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got everybody in a monopoly death grip of the internet.

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So, like [laugh] , Crystal is vindicated.

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Like, I’m sorry I told you the future, and then you made me cry.

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Jerk.

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But you made me cry in the cubicle, and I—

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The amount of women in tech, though, that situation has

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happened to where you write, they tell you’re wrong.

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You got to go cry in a cubicle, and then it’s your fault?

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Like, I’m just, like, oh, we’ve heard this story before.

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It’s our whole career.

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And

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one of the funny things, like, I was really concerned about

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accessibility, even back then, before I really learned about digital

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accessibility because I remember, in my interview for the web editor

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position, I talked about the flashing ads, and I brought a Pokémon.

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I was like, “Have you ever watched Pokémon before?” And

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I was like, you know, going through the case of how the

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episodes cause kids who have seizure disorders, health risks.

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And so, I was like, these ads are the same, and you have a

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responsibility for people who are [laugh] [unintelligible] your website.

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So, it’s funny because even when I wasn’t, like, this is, you know, digital

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accessibility, I had always been kind of concerned about that in, kind of,

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my—in throughout my roles, even though that was like me being a web editor.

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Because I’m like, well, I’m concerned about the web part of this paper, so,

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yeah.

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But I love that.

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That means you were meant for that, but you

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just didn’t know what it was called yet.

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Yes [laugh] . And then I cried, and then I eventually left, and—

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That’s because they were too

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good for that job.

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They didn’t appreciate you.

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It’s okay.

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[laugh]

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.
Yes.

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But when I was doing quality assurance, getting that ticket for JAWS,

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I’m like, I don’t know what this is, and ended up rejecting the ticket

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because I was like, “Hey, you can’t really ask someone who’s never

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used this software before to test this is going to be accessible.”

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You know, especially something like JAWS that it has kind of a high

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learning curve, but from that point on, I was like, you know what?

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One, I want to learn more.

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Two, I know, like, my vision is not really great,

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so maybe this can be something that can help me out.

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And then from there, I really just kind of started digging into accessibility.

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And first I was just, like, okay, how do I find more about it?

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And there were information—it wasn’t like now where there’s more information.

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I’m not going to say there’s, you know, a plethora of information

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about digital accessibility, but there’s definitely more now

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than when I first, kind of, started back in, like, yeah, 2014.

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And so, a lot of times I—that’s also how I started doing a lot

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of public speaking because I would find out things, and I’m like,

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I’m going to share this with everybody else in my predicament

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of, like, here’s how to get started with digital accessibility.

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Here are these, you know, introductory things that you should know,

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and then hopefully you’ll kind of be, like, me and learn more.

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And so, that’s really how I kind of got into it.

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And the more I got into it, the more it helped me out with my visual

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impairments because I do sometimes need to use a screen reader.

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And that’s been really great.

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I actually went to the doctor, and I had the optometrists, and, you know,

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they’re like, “You haven’t been here in, like, years,” and they’re like,

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“Why?” And I was like, “Well, I didn’t need to use my prosthetic lens because

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I just use a screen reader for work.” But through that, I’ve, you know, been

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able to inform people about accessibility, but also help myself as well.

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Probably shouldn’t done that.

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I’m—please anyone listening, don’t do that.

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That’s super interesting, though.

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Just the idea that, like, you can use a tool to offset,

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like, solving the problem or helping the problem more.

316
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Like, I can just work around this, which is what a lot of

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us do is, like, this is more convenient to, like, just do it

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the hard way than to try to go schedule appointments, and—

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I think that’s common with a lot of people with disabilities, like,

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my son, when he was having a hard time with reading, he’d get Alexa

321
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and everything else to either talk-to-text, or to read it for him.

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But he was struggling with autism, and ADHD, and dyslexia, so

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it was like, it was so much work that it was easier for him

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to find ways around it than to deal—where he would have a hard

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time writing, so he would type it, or he would talk-to-text it.

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And I was like, well, I don’t want you to not learn how

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to write, and then the doctor in the school was like,

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but I mean, we’re all going to type one day anyways.

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And I was like, “That’s valid.”

330
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You’re absolutely right.

331
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Even though I only need one lens because my right eye is [unintelligible]

332
00:16:23,360 --> 00:16:26,369
, I don’t need it [laugh] it’s like, I don’t need a lens for that.

333
00:16:26,370 --> 00:16:28,099
But it’s expensive.

334
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Like, a hard lens for my left eye is around $1500, $2,000.

335
00:16:36,550 --> 00:16:37,810
It’s a lot of money.

336
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And that’s the thing of, I realized, you know,

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I’m kind of privileged to be able to pay that.

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But it’s not to say it’s not, you know, still expensive, but there are

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a lot of people who that is absolutely not affordable in any way, and

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they’ll have to find ways, too, around that, to access what they need.

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And so, even when we’re pushing, I know we’re kind of all over, but when it

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comes to, you know, accessible assistive technology, a lot of people forget,

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but, you know, they’re thinking about, well, software in digital things, but

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a lot of assistive technology is also for people who have mobility issues.

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With their hands, they can use a mouse stick or a head stick

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where they have—like, they can strap it onto their forehead,

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and to type and do things like that because depending on what

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is needed, not everything can be solved with digital technology.

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And so, that’s something I always really try to stress to people.

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It’s like, yes, we’re in the digital age.

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We’re in the internet age, and there’s a lot of things that we can do to make

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life better for people with disabilities, but also just, you know, everyone in

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general, but that doesn’t mean that the digital solution is always the best.

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So, it’s funny when you’re talking to you, like, a developer

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or designer, and they’re like, kind of like, sometimes what

356
00:18:03,230 --> 00:18:06,310
you’re doing right here, that code you’re putting out, that

357
00:18:06,310 --> 00:18:09,980
diagram that you have for me, maybe that’s not the best solution.

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That usually, rarely, like, happens because usually I’m dealing with actual

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00:18:15,049 --> 00:18:20,370
components in applications, but I always, like, to make people think about

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that, kind of like, out-of-the-box, thinking about solutions for accessibility.

361
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Because sometimes we get to the point where we want to solve everything

362
00:18:28,870 --> 00:18:31,619
with a hammer, and the hammer is not always the right thing for the job.

363
00:18:31,830 --> 00:18:35,020
I think it’s super rad though, that you had so many

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00:18:35,020 --> 00:18:38,440
different, almost like, callings to the same path with your

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00:18:38,480 --> 00:18:41,129
own personal, like, struggles, but it make your life better.

366
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But then also, you were already interested,

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00:18:42,910 --> 00:18:45,479
in other ways, in other industries, about you.

368
00:18:45,490 --> 00:18:50,359
Like, it just shows that how valuable you are as, like, a domain expert

369
00:18:50,389 --> 00:18:53,619
in that situation because, like, look at how many different ways you

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00:18:53,619 --> 00:18:57,010
bring value to that and you are an expert in that field, but you can

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also talk about your personal experiences, and you’re not just somebody

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who rolled up and decided it was cool, and didn’t really do the work.

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00:19:02,670 --> 00:19:05,499
But also, it’s so cool that you’re actually really passionate

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00:19:05,500 --> 00:19:07,780
about it, and you want to share the information because a lot

375
00:19:07,780 --> 00:19:10,289
of times just doing it, to do it, isn’t the same, you know?

376
00:19:10,299 --> 00:19:11,539
So, that’s really cool that you’ve—

377
00:19:11,609 --> 00:19:14,130
Some of the most welcoming communities I’ve ever

378
00:19:14,210 --> 00:19:16,930
experienced were in disability circles, right?

379
00:19:16,930 --> 00:19:20,010
Like, I had friends that were deaf in college, and I have—like, there’s been

380
00:19:20,010 --> 00:19:25,049
so many situations where it’s, like, the desire to share in that community is

381
00:19:25,049 --> 00:19:29,050
so strong to help everyone else get better and to deal with the world, right?

382
00:19:29,050 --> 00:19:31,640
Because the world is not set up for these things.

383
00:19:31,640 --> 00:19:34,600
And it’s like, people are, like, I have a new mouse joystick that works for

384
00:19:34,600 --> 00:19:37,510
me in this situation, but it doesn’t work with this software or something.

385
00:19:37,510 --> 00:19:39,230
And someone else is, like, oh, I have that solution.

386
00:19:39,480 --> 00:19:43,279
In a lot of ways, the open-source ethos of, like, we are just going

387
00:19:43,280 --> 00:19:48,209
to do the right thing for the community is so alive and well in

388
00:19:48,260 --> 00:19:50,820
disabled, anyone that needs accessibility, like, those communities,

389
00:19:50,820 --> 00:19:54,270
to me, have always, like, carried that on, more so than open-source,

390
00:19:54,270 --> 00:19:56,149
where, like, I get to make some money off this now, right?

391
00:19:56,149 --> 00:19:59,370
It’s, like, shifted in a lot of ways, where it’s like, oh, you can see the code.

392
00:19:59,370 --> 00:20:00,259
You can’t have the code.

393
00:20:00,259 --> 00:20:02,950
So, there’s a lot of things that have happened in what used to be

394
00:20:02,950 --> 00:20:07,060
open-source 40 years ago, and I feel like communities that have kept

395
00:20:07,060 --> 00:20:10,639
that going are the ones that, like, I need this to live, to have a better

396
00:20:10,640 --> 00:20:14,240
life, to have my friends have a better life, or my family, whatever.

397
00:20:14,440 --> 00:20:17,090
I’m going to go deep into this topic, and I’m going to learn everything

398
00:20:17,090 --> 00:20:19,260
about it, and then I’m going to go tell you about exactly what you’re

399
00:20:19,680 --> 00:20:22,839
saying with, like, giving conference talks and writing and stuff.

400
00:20:23,000 --> 00:20:26,890
I think it’s sad because a lot of medical research is done for

401
00:20:27,250 --> 00:20:30,229
either the military, which means you have to be—a lot of their target

402
00:20:30,230 --> 00:20:34,680
audience is men between the ages of, like, what, I think 18 and 36.

403
00:20:35,309 --> 00:20:39,349
So, if you think about how many, like, black women or people with

404
00:20:39,349 --> 00:20:43,390
disabilities who are never brought into the medical conversation so, like,

405
00:20:43,400 --> 00:20:47,630
think about how many times you’ve seen a parent on GoFundMe raising money

406
00:20:47,650 --> 00:20:52,770
to push a drug forward because it’s a drug for rare situations or a rare

407
00:20:52,770 --> 00:20:55,899
disease, and their kid’s going to die if someone doesn’t do that, you know?

408
00:20:55,900 --> 00:20:59,379
Like, it gets to the point where you have to advocate for yourself and your

409
00:20:59,379 --> 00:21:04,909
children because there’s so many gaps for the disabled community, and for a

410
00:21:04,910 --> 00:21:09,090
lot of under-representative medical communities, that you have no other choice.

411
00:21:09,260 --> 00:21:11,100
If you look at open-source, what is open-source?

412
00:21:11,160 --> 00:21:14,300
It is people solving a problem because it’s usually something that they needed.

413
00:21:14,360 --> 00:21:15,950
So, the two really mesh.

414
00:21:16,139 --> 00:21:21,620
Yeah, and open-source is really important for—especially when it comes to

415
00:21:21,939 --> 00:21:26,910
assistive technology, and digital accessibility—of people really having

416
00:21:26,910 --> 00:21:32,459
that drive to go and finding open-source projects, to submit tickets for,

417
00:21:32,509 --> 00:21:36,719
you know, to correct issues about, you know, something that’s inaccessible.

418
00:21:36,750 --> 00:21:41,770
There’s so many accessibility experts who are out there, who

419
00:21:41,770 --> 00:21:45,589
spend their time, their free time, valuable free time, putting

420
00:21:45,599 --> 00:21:49,719
in tickets, joining, you know, open-source projects to make sure

421
00:21:49,719 --> 00:21:53,210
things are accessible for people with disabilities out there.

422
00:21:53,480 --> 00:21:58,080
And it’s also important from the kind of focus of things like

423
00:21:58,110 --> 00:22:02,860
right-to-repair because when someone is relying on technology

424
00:22:03,260 --> 00:22:08,269
to provide them access, sometimes companies go out of business,

425
00:22:08,549 --> 00:22:13,020
sometimes particular applications are sunsetted and things like that.

426
00:22:13,300 --> 00:22:18,820
But it’s not easy for someone with disability to just switch to a newer

427
00:22:18,820 --> 00:22:26,269
thing or find an alternative, and so they’re either stuck without something

428
00:22:26,270 --> 00:22:31,480
that is required for them to have a good quality of life, or, you know,

429
00:22:31,490 --> 00:22:37,890
going into debt in bankruptcy to get that so things in here I’m in Colorado.

430
00:22:38,080 --> 00:22:41,350
I think in the last I think it was either last year

431
00:22:41,350 --> 00:22:44,679
or the year before, having the right to repair.

432
00:22:45,040 --> 00:22:49,129
Because sometimes, when it comes to digital technology, like—or assistive

433
00:22:49,130 --> 00:22:54,790
technology—like wheelchairs, the right to—some states don’t allow that to

434
00:22:55,100 --> 00:22:59,590
happen because companies are, like, well, if you do that, you void a warranty.

435
00:22:59,599 --> 00:23:03,670
You know, we won’t honor the, you know, the warranty that you have.

436
00:23:03,700 --> 00:23:06,510
Or it’s just… you can’t do it.

437
00:23:06,840 --> 00:23:10,230
And the thing is, it is very important because the

438
00:23:10,230 --> 00:23:12,400
thing is, it’s like, well, what can I, you know, do?

439
00:23:13,510 --> 00:23:16,760
The open-source community is very important

440
00:23:17,719 --> 00:23:19,999
when it comes to digital accessibility.

441
00:23:20,139 --> 00:23:23,270
I love that you tie that together with the right to repair because that’s

442
00:23:23,340 --> 00:23:27,620
totally what it’s—I mean because for physical, like, disabilities of mobility,

443
00:23:27,890 --> 00:23:30,770
that is, like, I have to get to the store, I have to get to my doctor’s.

444
00:23:30,770 --> 00:23:33,340
But, like, I have to be able to fix the thing that allows

445
00:23:33,340 --> 00:23:35,959
me to do what other people will take for granted, or

446
00:23:35,960 --> 00:23:38,080
what other people say, like, oh, this is just whatever.

447
00:23:38,080 --> 00:23:41,740
But, like, tying that to, like, software right-to-repair as well, where

448
00:23:41,740 --> 00:23:46,580
it’s like, hey, Microsoft deprecated Windows whatever, and I needed that

449
00:23:46,580 --> 00:23:49,680
because my software only works with it, and I don’t have the source code.

450
00:23:49,680 --> 00:23:53,220
I don’t have the ability to repair that thing anymore is another

451
00:23:53,220 --> 00:23:56,120
critical piece of, like, right, to repair goes to software.

452
00:23:56,120 --> 00:24:00,059
If it’s not open-source, we have to be able to protect people that I

453
00:24:00,059 --> 00:24:04,610
need—and people are crazy dedicated when it’s their livelihood, right?

454
00:24:04,610 --> 00:24:06,189
They’re like, I have to be able to do this.

455
00:24:06,430 --> 00:24:09,950
I will open a hex editor and start matching keys and figure

456
00:24:09,950 --> 00:24:14,439
out how to get around your whatever constraints in your

457
00:24:14,440 --> 00:24:17,570
deprecation so that I can function as a human in society.

458
00:24:17,690 --> 00:24:20,790
And even goes beyond right-to-repair because—and I’m

459
00:24:20,790 --> 00:24:22,940
a huge component for updating your version of Java;

460
00:24:22,940 --> 00:24:27,670
we know that—but sometimes, like—girl, don’t—just—

461
00:24:27,670 --> 00:24:29,740
We’re 30 minutes in, and Java’s here.

462
00:24:29,740 --> 00:24:29,970
All right [laugh]

463
00:24:29,970 --> 00:24:31,075
.
[laugh]

464
00:24:32,180 --> 00:24:35,630
.
Well, it’s important, though, because Apple changed their API for Macs at

465
00:24:35,630 --> 00:24:40,659
a certain point, and a lot of the accessibility features for Java were not

466
00:24:40,660 --> 00:24:44,450
compatible, so they need it to be back-ported from a later version of Java.

467
00:24:44,500 --> 00:24:48,529
But at a certain point you stop, contrib—or you stop doing back-ports,

468
00:24:48,530 --> 00:24:52,720
and doing certain, like, levels of maintenance for older LTSS, so

469
00:24:52,720 --> 00:24:56,399
you’re just going to do security, and important back-ports, right?

470
00:24:56,870 --> 00:25:01,160
But one row of back-ports I did, it was accessibility, and it was

471
00:25:01,160 --> 00:25:04,119
to an LTS that we weren’t going to actually start doing back-ports

472
00:25:04,130 --> 00:25:06,859
unless they were security or important, but you have to fight.

473
00:25:06,860 --> 00:25:10,619
Like, dude, these people need these things, and they can’t use their computers,

474
00:25:10,650 --> 00:25:14,950
and not everything is going—like, we can push people all you want to upgrade,

475
00:25:15,330 --> 00:25:18,610
but not everybody’s going to listen, and it affects those people’s lives.

476
00:25:18,620 --> 00:25:22,379
And then just trying to get it to work with things that just

477
00:25:22,400 --> 00:25:25,080
aren’t compatible, you know, and trying to bring that back, and

478
00:25:25,080 --> 00:25:28,170
then you have to lobby: this is really important, even though it’s

479
00:25:28,219 --> 00:25:31,550
this huge burden, and it’s not for an LTS that we’re supporting.

480
00:25:32,030 --> 00:25:34,730
So, we didn’t end up getting them all done, but I was like, let’s get

481
00:25:34,730 --> 00:25:38,510
as many done as possible because it’s like the slider that there’s

482
00:25:38,510 --> 00:25:42,470
so many UI parts that people don’t realize that you have to do it.

483
00:25:42,480 --> 00:25:45,670
So, that was one of the best contributions to open-source is

484
00:25:45,679 --> 00:25:49,380
being able to fix those accessibilities, and to, like, back-port

485
00:25:49,380 --> 00:25:52,870
them, and being able to, like, make it work for those versions.

486
00:25:52,880 --> 00:25:56,509
Because what if those people don’t have access to whatever program?

487
00:25:56,510 --> 00:25:58,049
Sometimes there are programs that they need.

488
00:25:58,050 --> 00:26:00,930
And, like, we all do, like, what digital therapy, we do all

489
00:26:00,930 --> 00:26:03,850
kind of things, and when you’re disabled, you might not have the

490
00:26:03,850 --> 00:26:06,910
mobility to get to a doctor’s appointment or to get somewhere.

491
00:26:06,950 --> 00:26:10,530
Maybe that’s how you take in conferences or you do your job.

492
00:26:10,690 --> 00:26:14,610
It’s always wild to me that sometimes you’ll get people who, you

493
00:26:14,610 --> 00:26:19,019
know, who’ll get it up—they’ll understand about security, but not

494
00:26:19,360 --> 00:26:23,790
understand that accessibility really is, you know, on that same level.

495
00:26:23,830 --> 00:26:25,400
It should literally be on par with it.

496
00:26:25,410 --> 00:26:27,620
If you’re going to put security updates to

497
00:26:27,620 --> 00:26:30,050
that LTS, you should also do accessibility.

498
00:26:30,440 --> 00:26:30,670
Yes.

499
00:26:31,250 --> 00:26:36,479
I wrote, like, a little while ago about InfoSec and accessibility

500
00:26:39,379 --> 00:26:42,530
and password managers because a lot of password managers in the past weren’t

501
00:26:42,530 --> 00:26:46,500
really, you know, accessible, which, that leaves you open to a vulnerability.

502
00:26:46,610 --> 00:26:50,870
Also being open to the fact that, you know, I know one thing—you know,

503
00:26:50,920 --> 00:26:54,780
there’s this book call—it’s a, you know, a physical book that’s, like,

504
00:26:55,020 --> 00:26:58,409
‘The Book of Passwords.’ And people are, like, “Don’t put your passwords

505
00:26:58,410 --> 00:27:03,080
in there.” But it’s a thing of, well, if I can’t physically have my

506
00:27:03,080 --> 00:27:08,340
password, and the password manager is not accessible to me, well I

507
00:27:08,340 --> 00:27:12,460
could use the same password over and over again, and then that you have

508
00:27:12,460 --> 00:27:16,620
a vulnerability of, [laugh] you know, of your data because, well, your

509
00:27:16,629 --> 00:27:20,980
password, you know, it’s not going to be a 20 character password with,

510
00:27:20,990 --> 00:27:24,189
like, symbols; it’s going to be something that you can remember, and you’re

511
00:27:24,190 --> 00:27:27,799
using it at, you know, a hundred different sites and things like that.

512
00:27:27,840 --> 00:27:30,080
You know, I tell people it’s like, well, if you’re concerned about

513
00:27:30,290 --> 00:27:35,450
security, you also have to be—like, accessibility is not just front-end.

514
00:27:35,469 --> 00:27:40,430
It goes throughout, like, digital technology everywhere.

515
00:27:40,450 --> 00:27:43,764
It’s one of those things, like, accessibility is important.

516
00:27:44,130 --> 00:27:47,039
It’s on the same level with many things that we think of.

517
00:27:47,410 --> 00:27:49,629
And it’s not—you know, this is something a lot of

518
00:27:49,630 --> 00:27:52,899
accessibility experts say—accessibility is not an afterthought.

519
00:27:52,930 --> 00:27:54,014
And it really is not.

520
00:27:54,014 --> 00:27:58,110
It’s cliched saying, but it’s cliche for, like, for a reason.

521
00:27:58,340 --> 00:28:01,670
One of the things I think is interesting where that overlaps is, I remember

522
00:28:01,700 --> 00:28:05,670
back in the day when accessibility features in Windows and on websites

523
00:28:05,719 --> 00:28:09,220
ended up being the vulnerability, right, where they’re like, oh, guess what?

524
00:28:09,429 --> 00:28:13,379
I can open up prompts on a Windows login screen because I can click

525
00:28:13,400 --> 00:28:16,330
the screen reader, which then opens a way for me to get to see.

526
00:28:16,360 --> 00:28:19,650
Like, whatever the process was just, like, oh, these pieces that were

527
00:28:20,470 --> 00:28:23,120
afterthoughts ended up being the vulnerability, and if you would have

528
00:28:23,130 --> 00:28:26,370
integrated that ahead of time, you could have avoided these things, and you

529
00:28:26,370 --> 00:28:30,370
could have known, oh, why wouldn’t I want to have a prompt at a login screen?

530
00:28:30,450 --> 00:28:33,659
Like, those things are important, and that’s super interesting.

531
00:28:33,670 --> 00:28:37,040
And you also reminded me, years ago, my mother in law was like,

532
00:28:37,050 --> 00:28:39,330
she was signing into [unintelligible] website, or whatever new

533
00:28:39,330 --> 00:28:41,540
streaming service—I don’t remember what it was—and she pulls out

534
00:28:41,540 --> 00:28:44,159
a little notebook, and she wrote it down, wrote down the password.

535
00:28:44,159 --> 00:28:45,897
She’s like, “Oh, you probably don’t like that I do this.” I’m like,

536
00:28:45,969 --> 00:28:48,522
“I think that’s fantastic.” I was like, “I love that you do that.

537
00:28:48,522 --> 00:28:50,659
I don’t want you to use—you don’t have to use a password manager.”

538
00:28:50,660 --> 00:28:52,230
So like, write it down somewhere.

539
00:28:52,230 --> 00:28:55,650
So, you have a unique password that maybe you can’t remember.

540
00:28:55,690 --> 00:28:58,259
Because if you can’t remember it, it’s probably long and has something complex

541
00:28:58,260 --> 00:29:02,849
in it that might be better than you just saying, like, oh, it’s dog123, right?

542
00:29:03,460 --> 00:29:04,879
That’s not a great password.

543
00:29:04,879 --> 00:29:08,610
So absolutely, like, I think that’s fascinating when there’s overlap

544
00:29:08,610 --> 00:29:13,490
there too, of, like, oh, maybe the best practice doesn’t fit every

545
00:29:13,490 --> 00:29:17,270
situation, and at some point it is just a practice for some people,

546
00:29:17,389 --> 00:29:20,510
and we have to throw those rules out the window when it’s just

547
00:29:20,520 --> 00:29:22,830
not going to work, and we have to be aware of those things too.

548
00:29:23,109 --> 00:29:27,189
I think that’s one of our biggest hindrances in security, is that we build

549
00:29:27,200 --> 00:29:31,760
these security features for technology and to combat certain aspects of

550
00:29:31,760 --> 00:29:36,329
technology, but we forget that the biggest, weakest link as humans, right?

551
00:29:36,330 --> 00:29:41,139
So, if we don’t make technology practices and security practices where

552
00:29:41,150 --> 00:29:45,510
it fits human nature, and part of that is we’re all built differently.

553
00:29:45,530 --> 00:29:46,942
We all, our brains are differently—

554
00:29:46,942 --> 00:29:47,226
All humans.

555
00:29:47,226 --> 00:29:47,980
It’s not the

556
00:29:48,400 --> 00:29:49,750
ideal, here’s the one—

557
00:29:50,650 --> 00:29:52,970
Like, okay, think about the amount of people that we know are

558
00:29:52,970 --> 00:29:55,629
super neuro-spicy in tech, and we’re going to pretend, like, we

559
00:29:55,630 --> 00:29:58,000
all were going to remember passwords to every different thing.

560
00:29:58,299 --> 00:29:58,779
Be real.

561
00:29:58,930 --> 00:30:00,420
What did you have for lunch yesterday, Autumn?

562
00:30:00,469 --> 00:30:02,720
I don’t know [laugh] . You know what I mean?

563
00:30:03,010 --> 00:30:05,380
I am the worst with passwords, with a whole

564
00:30:05,990 --> 00:30:08,239
software and security degree over here.

565
00:30:08,580 --> 00:30:12,039
If you look at so much of security, it is definitely

566
00:30:12,040 --> 00:30:15,490
human psychology and how we interact with tech, right?

567
00:30:15,520 --> 00:30:17,990
And, like, how our biases and so many things.

568
00:30:18,029 --> 00:30:20,370
And if we are not taking accessibility in with

569
00:30:20,370 --> 00:30:22,430
that, you’re setting people up for failure.

570
00:30:22,660 --> 00:30:26,710
If that isn’t part of the conversation, how can we truly

571
00:30:26,710 --> 00:30:30,030
make products, and best practices, and put things in place?

572
00:30:30,520 --> 00:30:32,713
Because what’s going to happen when it doesn’t work for you?

573
00:30:32,713 --> 00:30:35,289
You’re going to go around it, which makes it even more insecure.

574
00:30:35,639 --> 00:30:38,370
I feel like I’m like, on this new, like, thing of preaching, like,

575
00:30:38,380 --> 00:30:42,660
for one, how is human psychology in accessibility, and just all

576
00:30:42,660 --> 00:30:46,009
of how we interact with technology, what is that intersection?

577
00:30:46,010 --> 00:30:47,580
And then, like, the world has changed so

578
00:30:47,580 --> 00:30:49,619
much in the last couple of years, right?

579
00:30:49,630 --> 00:30:51,470
Like, we’ve had so many advances.

580
00:30:51,589 --> 00:30:53,389
This month has been a world

581
00:30:54,770 --> 00:30:54,810
change.

582
00:30:54,810 --> 00:30:54,840
[laugh]

583
00:30:56,860 --> 00:30:59,520
. Okay, we’re all around the same age, right?

584
00:30:59,560 --> 00:31:02,110
Like in high school, think about what you could do from your phone.

585
00:31:02,160 --> 00:31:04,460
Think about how you interacted with the world.

586
00:31:04,590 --> 00:31:04,680
You had a phone?

587
00:31:04,680 --> 00:31:04,910
Hold on

588
00:31:05,180 --> 00:31:05,210
[
laugh]

589
00:31:05,210 --> 00:31:05,475
.
Later.

590
00:31:05,740 --> 00:31:06,050
Later.

591
00:31:06,210 --> 00:31:06,790
Much later.

592
00:31:07,379 --> 00:31:07,959
Much later.

593
00:31:08,589 --> 00:31:08,619
[laugh]

594
00:31:09,039 --> 00:31:11,750
.
And it was because I was left unattended, okay?

595
00:31:13,929 --> 00:31:15,530
It was not because it was good.

596
00:31:15,540 --> 00:31:17,150
It was because of for all the wrong reasons.

597
00:31:17,810 --> 00:31:19,010
So, think about it, right?

598
00:31:19,130 --> 00:31:23,520
We have not we, like, our laws are the way that we just

599
00:31:23,540 --> 00:31:26,439
think about things has not caught up with technology.

600
00:31:26,830 --> 00:31:30,300
We are not securing things in a way that is with this

601
00:31:30,330 --> 00:31:34,590
level of misinformation, just how humans interact with it.

602
00:31:34,590 --> 00:31:35,900
Like, you need a phone for everything.

603
00:31:35,900 --> 00:31:38,130
People will be, like, “Oh, well, if the millennials didn’t buy

604
00:31:38,130 --> 00:31:41,029
that iPhone and that coffee,” what can you do without a phone?

605
00:31:42,900 --> 00:31:45,320
We literally are setting up a program to help people

606
00:31:45,780 --> 00:31:48,960
who are unhoused fill out applications and stuff because

607
00:31:48,970 --> 00:31:53,260
you can’t even get help to be housed without technology.

608
00:31:53,390 --> 00:31:57,379
I totally—like, I remember my own mind shift of, like, thinking, when I

609
00:31:57,380 --> 00:32:01,280
was younger and I would see people that were unhoused with phones, and I’m

610
00:32:01,280 --> 00:32:03,719
like, they can afford a phone; they should be able to afford something else.

611
00:32:03,830 --> 00:32:05,749
And then, like, realizing it later that,

612
00:32:05,750 --> 00:32:08,320
like, I can’t do anything without a phone.

613
00:32:08,370 --> 00:32:09,750
They have to have that.

614
00:32:09,980 --> 00:32:13,480
But okay, but do you see how you had a mind shift and your brain was open?

615
00:32:13,990 --> 00:32:17,330
Trying to understand and explain that to old dudes, and, like, try to,

616
00:32:17,550 --> 00:32:20,920
like, tell them why we’re advocating for this, they will fight you to

617
00:32:20,920 --> 00:32:24,740
the death [laugh] . And I’m just, like, I need you to open your brain to

618
00:32:24,740 --> 00:32:28,315
other people and their experiences that are different than you [laugh]

619
00:32:28,860 --> 00:32:31,410
.
It’s like, oh, well, you can apply for a job.

620
00:32:31,480 --> 00:32:32,560
Like, you can just go in.

621
00:32:33,170 --> 00:32:37,029
The amount of places that will kick you out if you try to go in and try to

622
00:32:37,030 --> 00:32:41,329
apply, places, like, Walmart or Target, like, if you go and say, “Hey, I

623
00:32:41,330 --> 00:32:44,830
want to apply for a position here,” no, they send you to a—like, sometimes,

624
00:32:44,870 --> 00:32:48,800
if they have a kiosk there, they’ll send you to that kiosk, or they’ll just

625
00:32:48,800 --> 00:32:55,199
say, “Go home and apply online.” And it’s like, no more can you, like, oh,

626
00:32:56,540 --> 00:33:00,269
you know, beat the pavement, and go around to different companies, and hand

627
00:33:00,270 --> 00:33:04,620
out your resume because that’s a sure way to get your resume into the trash.

628
00:33:04,650 --> 00:33:06,970
And half the time, people are so understaffed

629
00:33:06,980 --> 00:33:08,629
they don’t have time to talk to you.

630
00:33:08,710 --> 00:33:12,110
And it’s wild, like, you’ll see people, like, indignant, giving

631
00:33:12,110 --> 00:33:15,210
this advice, and you’re, like, have you thought about how the world

632
00:33:15,210 --> 00:33:19,039
has changed since you gave that advice, or since you made these

633
00:33:19,120 --> 00:33:22,410
social contracts of what you think trying hard and working hard is?

634
00:33:22,410 --> 00:33:24,620
Because you’re not even being understanding

635
00:33:24,620 --> 00:33:26,460
of the situations that most humans are in.

636
00:33:26,530 --> 00:33:29,659
There are whole, like, organizations that—we were thinking about how to

637
00:33:29,660 --> 00:33:32,209
volunteer for [Melshouse] Coders, and we’re, like, “Well, what about all the

638
00:33:32,210 --> 00:33:35,400
people that don’t even”—Washington is one of the states that has really great,

639
00:33:35,510 --> 00:33:38,625
different programs, but you have to be able to have access to those programs.

640
00:33:38,625 --> 00:33:40,540
You have to know that they exist, right?

641
00:33:40,540 --> 00:33:43,790
So, like, it’s cool that they’re out there, but if you don’t have somebody

642
00:33:43,790 --> 00:33:46,600
giving them a way to sign up for them, and teaching them how to do it.

643
00:33:46,650 --> 00:33:50,550
So, it’s like, it’s just wild, how what’s technology and

644
00:33:50,550 --> 00:33:53,550
what is also, like, multiple human factors that you need

645
00:33:53,550 --> 00:33:56,620
to add into that to make using that technology successful.

646
00:34:00,150 --> 00:34:02,640
Running Kubernetes at scale is challenging.

647
00:34:03,010 --> 00:34:06,920
Running Kubernetes at scale securely is even more challenging.

648
00:34:07,139 --> 00:34:09,980
Access management and user management are some of the most

649
00:34:09,980 --> 00:34:13,220
important tools that we have today to be able to secure

650
00:34:13,370 --> 00:34:16,230
your Kubernetes cluster and protect your infrastructure.

651
00:34:16,420 --> 00:34:20,980
Using Tremolo Security with OpenUnison is the easiest way, whether it be

652
00:34:21,000 --> 00:34:25,430
on-prem or in the cloud, to simplify access management to your cluster.

653
00:34:25,549 --> 00:34:29,679
It provides a single sign-on and helps you with its robust security

654
00:34:29,679 --> 00:34:32,975
features to secure your cluster and automate your workflow.

655
00:34:33,130 --> 00:34:37,380
So, check out Tremolo Security for your single sign-on needs in Kubernetes.

656
00:34:37,710 --> 00:34:42,080
You can find them at fafo.fm/tremolo.

657
00:34:43,449 --> 00:34:48,790
That’s T-R-E-M-O-L-O.

658
00:34:55,940 --> 00:34:58,640
Crystal, how has accessibility and software

659
00:34:58,650 --> 00:35:01,759
changed since you started diving into it and—

660
00:35:01,759 --> 00:35:02,600
That’s a good question.

661
00:35:02,630 --> 00:35:03,289
—understanding it.

662
00:35:03,940 --> 00:35:05,400
I mean we kind of hit upon it.

663
00:35:05,410 --> 00:35:08,930
Like, really the one of the biggest changes is to kind

664
00:35:08,930 --> 00:35:12,890
of focus, you know, a lot more smartphones, and tablets,

665
00:35:12,890 --> 00:35:15,297
and things like that, and watches and things like that.

666
00:35:15,297 --> 00:35:19,620
And the thing is that I’ve really only, again, started

667
00:35:19,670 --> 00:35:23,719
focusing on accessibility around, like, 2015, 2016.

668
00:35:23,750 --> 00:35:25,800
So, that’s been the biggest thing.

669
00:35:25,880 --> 00:35:32,569
The web accessibility content guidelines back—the 2.0—didn’t

670
00:35:32,599 --> 00:35:37,970
even have really dedicated criteria guidelines about mobile

671
00:35:38,110 --> 00:35:42,699
accessibility, and that came in the update for WCAG 2.1.

672
00:35:43,370 --> 00:35:48,130
And I remember one of my first, like, dedicated jobs with

673
00:35:48,330 --> 00:35:55,309
accessibility, was kind of a mapping WCAG 2.0 to mobile accessibility

674
00:35:55,309 --> 00:36:01,490
because I was testing native Android and iOS applications.

675
00:36:01,710 --> 00:36:05,879
But it was really hard to do that because going by those

676
00:36:05,880 --> 00:36:10,690
guidelines, they weren’t really for mobile applications.

677
00:36:10,940 --> 00:36:15,949
So, a lot of my time was not just testing, but trying to figure out, okay,

678
00:36:15,980 --> 00:36:20,180
this is what these particular guidelines say, and this is for desktop.

679
00:36:20,420 --> 00:36:24,540
How does that apply to—and so that’s been the biggest thing,

680
00:36:24,800 --> 00:36:28,549
is that because there is a shift with software, that younger

681
00:36:28,559 --> 00:36:32,909
millennials, Gen Z, Gen Alpha, they’re not using desktop,

682
00:36:32,940 --> 00:36:36,479
and that’s the same for younger people with disabilities.

683
00:36:36,709 --> 00:36:38,550
They’re not using, you know, desktops.

684
00:36:38,630 --> 00:36:44,150
And so, that really means that there has to be a focus on

685
00:36:44,270 --> 00:36:47,639
accessibility for mobile applications and mobile devices.

686
00:36:47,870 --> 00:36:49,570
So, that’s been the biggest, you know, shift.

687
00:36:49,599 --> 00:36:54,029
And I think also just the fact that there is more information out

688
00:36:54,359 --> 00:36:58,510
there—there could always be more [laugh] because there is a fight to

689
00:36:59,020 --> 00:37:04,129
really—because there is still a lot of ableism when it comes to accessibility

690
00:37:04,130 --> 00:37:07,380
in technology, there’s a lot of people who still think disabled people

691
00:37:07,380 --> 00:37:11,979
don’t use the internet and use technology, which, again, blows my mind.

692
00:37:11,990 --> 00:37:16,319
But there really is a lot of people, unfortunately, in places that

693
00:37:16,320 --> 00:37:20,190
make, you know, decisions that do think that, that oh, well, our users.

694
00:37:20,670 --> 00:37:23,950
They don’t have disabilities, so why should we care about accessibility?

695
00:37:24,360 --> 00:37:26,620
So, those are the two biggest things, that there

696
00:37:26,660 --> 00:37:29,110
is more knowledge around, you know, accessibility.

697
00:37:29,110 --> 00:37:33,870
And especially when it comes to software engineers and developers with

698
00:37:33,900 --> 00:37:38,020
different frameworks, like, you know, you have React, and [Vue] , and

699
00:37:38,040 --> 00:37:43,290
all these, where they there are dedication to making sure that people are

700
00:37:43,320 --> 00:37:49,540
able to develop components right from the very start that are accessible.

701
00:37:49,860 --> 00:37:53,720
That’s something I’m really encouraged, but there’s so far, like, to go.

702
00:37:53,990 --> 00:37:56,850
Because you can provide those tools, you can provide those

703
00:37:56,870 --> 00:38:01,690
frameworks, but it doesn’t mean anything if people don’t know

704
00:38:01,880 --> 00:38:05,660
how to correctly implement them, and there’s no initiative

705
00:38:05,949 --> 00:38:10,420
in the places that they work to make sure that is happening.

706
00:38:10,640 --> 00:38:13,200
Is that a piece of practical advice you’d give to

707
00:38:13,260 --> 00:38:15,239
anyone listening to the show, like, a developer?

708
00:38:15,620 --> 00:38:17,370
How would I make my software more accessible?

709
00:38:17,370 --> 00:38:20,349
It sounds like using some of those frameworks is just step one.

710
00:38:20,349 --> 00:38:21,879
Like, don’t roll your own.

711
00:38:21,920 --> 00:38:25,690
You’re not going to have the rest of the stuff in it that would be

712
00:38:25,690 --> 00:38:29,800
accessible for people in various states, and I’m sure, React, and

713
00:38:29,800 --> 00:38:32,989
Vue, and some of these more popular frameworks, at least, already

714
00:38:32,990 --> 00:38:36,080
try to adhere to the web accessibility, like, standards, right?

715
00:38:36,080 --> 00:38:37,420
They’re like, oh, we’re going to implement some of

716
00:38:37,429 --> 00:38:39,859
the features that are required at a fundamental level.

717
00:38:39,920 --> 00:38:43,160
Yeah, at a fundamental level that, you know, there’s really good documentation.

718
00:38:43,160 --> 00:38:48,270
I know I’m in the midst of kind of re-skilling myself, like, so know

719
00:38:48,270 --> 00:38:51,050
there are tons of frameworks out there that I’m, like, needing to get

720
00:38:51,050 --> 00:38:55,520
familiar with, but a lot of them do have documentation of, like, how

721
00:38:55,559 --> 00:38:59,610
to go about using these frameworks to make sure things are accessible.

722
00:38:59,869 --> 00:39:02,770
And it’s really the want and desire of reading

723
00:39:02,770 --> 00:39:04,680
that documentation to do that correctly.

724
00:39:04,980 --> 00:39:09,379
Also, this is something, another kind of cliche within the accessibility

725
00:39:09,719 --> 00:39:15,169
community, but it’s very important, and that is using semantic HTML because

726
00:39:15,230 --> 00:39:19,680
I kind of consult with developers, like, all the time, that’s kind of

727
00:39:19,960 --> 00:39:25,250
part of what I do, and a lot of the issues that come about is because

728
00:39:25,600 --> 00:39:30,580
they’re doing kind of really custom things, and that really had they

729
00:39:30,580 --> 00:39:36,129
used [laugh] , like, semantic HTML, then it wouldn’t have been an issue.

730
00:39:36,260 --> 00:39:40,340
And then that’s when it comes with ARIA, which is—I was actually just talking

731
00:39:40,340 --> 00:39:44,389
about this on social media just the other day—I know I’m kind of jumping

732
00:39:45,120 --> 00:39:50,780
around [laugh] with this—if you can’t use semantic HTML, then you can use ARIA.

733
00:39:51,690 --> 00:39:55,470
And ARIA stands for Accessible, Rich internet Applications.

734
00:39:55,500 --> 00:40:01,810
And really that’s for—ARIA is when you can’t use semantic code to make

735
00:40:01,820 --> 00:40:10,199
custom, like, widgets and components accessible using the header element or

736
00:40:10,199 --> 00:40:15,830
H1 and H2 because assistive technology, screen readers and other assistive

737
00:40:15,840 --> 00:40:21,470
technology, they understand what those elements are for structurally.

738
00:40:21,830 --> 00:40:28,210
So, that’s the thing of, if you use semantic HTML, then screen

739
00:40:28,210 --> 00:40:31,470
readers and other assistive technology are better able to

740
00:40:31,480 --> 00:40:36,580
read the site, the application that the person is using it on.

741
00:40:36,940 --> 00:40:40,710
If that does not happen, then you’ll need to use

742
00:40:40,710 --> 00:40:43,120
something like ARIA to kind of make up the difference.

743
00:40:43,389 --> 00:40:47,450
The thing is, is that a lot of times when people, they

744
00:40:47,459 --> 00:40:51,330
don’t use semantic HTML, then there’s a report that

745
00:40:51,330 --> 00:40:53,570
something, it’s inaccessible, then they’ll go to use ARIA.

746
00:40:54,350 --> 00:40:58,940
But a lot of times people do not understand—developers do not understand ARIA

747
00:40:59,960 --> 00:41:04,330
because their first introduction to ARIA is they have a ticket to fix a bug.

748
00:41:04,600 --> 00:41:08,180
It’s not truly, like, realistic because, you know, a lot

749
00:41:08,870 --> 00:41:11,620
of times, developers or dealing with legacy code that

750
00:41:11,620 --> 00:41:14,660
they can’t go in and refactor and do things like that.

751
00:41:14,880 --> 00:41:21,770
So, it’s not ‘so don’t use ARIA.’ It should be more of ‘if you do have

752
00:41:21,770 --> 00:41:26,460
to use ARIA, you need to know how to use it correctly and understand

753
00:41:26,610 --> 00:41:30,740
it.’ And that’s something that, you know, I really press upon developers.

754
00:41:30,740 --> 00:41:33,370
It’s like, please learn that it shouldn’t be your

755
00:41:33,370 --> 00:41:37,059
go-to but I understand that you’re not control.

756
00:41:37,059 --> 00:41:39,150
Like, you don’t control the whole codebase,

757
00:41:39,490 --> 00:41:41,400
so you can’t go ahead and do everything.

758
00:41:41,609 --> 00:41:45,070
But understand how to do this correctly because if you’re doing it

759
00:41:45,080 --> 00:41:49,010
incorrectly, it really does have a major effect, depending on what

760
00:41:49,010 --> 00:41:53,779
you’re working on, that this could mean someone, they can’t access an

761
00:41:53,780 --> 00:41:58,649
application, and that application can mean the difference between them

762
00:41:58,650 --> 00:42:02,350
not getting to a program, losing opportunities, and things like that.

763
00:42:02,710 --> 00:42:06,770
How can people get context for learning ARIA and stuff?

764
00:42:06,790 --> 00:42:08,560
Also, I have another follow up question after this.

765
00:42:08,650 --> 00:42:11,220
I just opened their docs, and I love their, like, opening statement of

766
00:42:11,330 --> 00:42:16,089
basically, like, “Use native HTML elements and attributes wherever possible.

767
00:42:16,100 --> 00:42:17,039
ARIA is a fallback.

768
00:42:17,039 --> 00:42:20,330
Don’t try to, like, shove this in there.” And then their first example—like,

769
00:42:20,330 --> 00:42:22,390
this, is great docs, just pulling this up—like, the very first example, the

770
00:42:22,390 --> 00:42:26,240
very first example, has a HTML, like, a div, and it’s like, “If you have a

771
00:42:26,240 --> 00:42:30,490
progress bar, here’s how you add the value now, the value at minimum, the

772
00:42:30,490 --> 00:42:33,880
value at maximum, and that’s how someone can see a progress bar loading

773
00:42:33,889 --> 00:42:37,379
without being able to see it if that’s that attribute, or if that piece on the

774
00:42:37,380 --> 00:42:40,930
page isn’t already accessible.” And that’s, like, a great start right there.

775
00:42:40,930 --> 00:42:41,500
I love that.

776
00:42:42,350 --> 00:42:44,800
W3C’s Web Accessibility Initiative has

777
00:42:44,809 --> 00:42:47,980
really, really good documentations on ARIA.

778
00:42:48,030 --> 00:42:52,229
Also, that’s where Web Accessibility Content Guidelines is, as well.

779
00:42:52,350 --> 00:42:56,339
That’s kind of the first thing when I’m meeting with, like, a developer,

780
00:42:56,640 --> 00:43:00,270
those are the first things I’m pulling out because it’s all there,

781
00:43:00,270 --> 00:43:03,460
and there’s so many great people that contribute to these initiatives.

782
00:43:03,780 --> 00:43:07,269
It’s the first place to go, and it’s one of the best, a good

783
00:43:07,520 --> 00:43:12,210
fundamental grasp of how to really start developing, you know,

784
00:43:12,510 --> 00:43:16,890
for accessibility and fixing issues of inaccessible issues.

785
00:43:17,260 --> 00:43:21,060
We all know it’s hard to get into open-source, and it’s not always welcoming

786
00:43:21,060 --> 00:43:24,120
to everyone, and we’re trying to change that, and open-source is going

787
00:43:24,120 --> 00:43:28,110
through a lot right now, but do you think that it’s easier for people

788
00:43:28,110 --> 00:43:33,509
to, kind of, point out, and ticket, and kind of add a voice, and get a

789
00:43:33,510 --> 00:43:36,690
seat at the table in open-source than it is, like, a major FANG company?

790
00:43:36,720 --> 00:43:41,160
Because it’s really hard to, like, give a voice and to draw attention

791
00:43:41,160 --> 00:43:44,249
to the things that we need to change without having a seat at the table.

792
00:43:44,250 --> 00:43:48,900
And people from that may deal with disabilities, to be able to say, “Hey,

793
00:43:48,900 --> 00:43:53,730
this is not working for me,” and I would, like to think, in theory, being

794
00:43:53,730 --> 00:43:57,180
able to open a ticket on GitHub and having, you know, to be able to join

795
00:43:57,180 --> 00:44:01,470
Slack for an open-source project or make comments on GitHub would be more

796
00:44:01,470 --> 00:44:05,429
accessible to at least show people, hey, I’m struggling with this part.

797
00:44:05,809 --> 00:44:09,220
Do you think that is a way that we can make better software?

798
00:44:09,450 --> 00:44:12,920
I think it is more accessible.

799
00:44:13,050 --> 00:44:14,950
Is it easier to get?

800
00:44:15,389 --> 00:44:16,920
That’s kind of debatable.

801
00:44:16,929 --> 00:44:21,280
Where trying to talk to, like, corporations and things, like, unless you’re

802
00:44:21,509 --> 00:44:26,279
someone who’s, like, working inside the company or is a customer that you

803
00:44:26,280 --> 00:44:32,860
know spends a lot on products and stuff, it can be a lot harder to do that.

804
00:44:32,889 --> 00:44:36,440
And so with, you know, open-source projects, it is as easy

805
00:44:36,469 --> 00:44:39,740
as submitting an issue on GitHub and things like that.

806
00:44:40,100 --> 00:44:45,759
But something I have noticed is that sometimes, like, they’ll submit

807
00:44:45,770 --> 00:44:50,100
issues and they’ll just sit there, and people will—sometimes, I

808
00:44:50,100 --> 00:44:53,540
have seen people write out, like, “Well, why does this matter?

809
00:44:53,610 --> 00:44:56,490
This is, you know, this is not something that really

810
00:44:56,490 --> 00:45:00,640
matters for this project.” And that is very disheartening.

811
00:45:00,640 --> 00:45:05,569
And for someone who is maybe new to accessibility, that can really discourage.

812
00:45:05,730 --> 00:45:08,399
Now, there are a lot of old heads for

813
00:45:08,400 --> 00:45:12,150
accessibility, they’re not letting that stop them.

814
00:45:12,610 --> 00:45:13,770
They will submit tickets.

815
00:45:13,790 --> 00:45:14,960
They will follow up.

816
00:45:15,139 --> 00:45:18,810
There are some really cool people, they have thicker skin.

817
00:45:19,110 --> 00:45:23,040
But there’s a lot of, like, newer people who are new to accessibility,

818
00:45:23,040 --> 00:45:26,480
who, you know, really mean well, but, you know, and they’ll do this,

819
00:45:26,490 --> 00:45:30,000
and they’re like, “I submitted a ticket.” And it’s like, awesome, great.

820
00:45:30,020 --> 00:45:33,020
And they’re thinking, well, now this is going to get solved.

821
00:45:33,040 --> 00:45:33,929
And I’m like, whoa.

822
00:45:34,299 --> 00:45:36,160
Let’s put a break on your expectations.

823
00:45:36,160 --> 00:45:38,840
Like, you know, hopefully that will happen.

824
00:45:38,890 --> 00:45:42,290
Maybe you won’t do you will have to do a lot of pushing on that.

825
00:45:42,550 --> 00:45:43,819
Sometimes you really do.

826
00:45:43,890 --> 00:45:45,990
But yeah, I do think it’s more accessible.

827
00:45:45,990 --> 00:45:51,610
I don’t know if it’s easier to get accessibility dealt with.

828
00:45:52,059 --> 00:45:54,960
We’ve been talking all of the accessibility—or at least, mostly accessibility

829
00:45:54,969 --> 00:45:59,760
has been focused on the front-end, web interfaces, applications, screen readers.

830
00:45:59,830 --> 00:46:04,479
Have you have any accessibility for audio, you know, text-to-audio, or

831
00:46:04,480 --> 00:46:09,330
screen readers for, like, terminals, for back-ends, for command line?

832
00:46:09,330 --> 00:46:10,349
That seems, like, I was just trying to

833
00:46:10,350 --> 00:46:12,549
think, like, how does that get implemented?

834
00:46:12,619 --> 00:46:12,959
Or…

835
00:46:13,210 --> 00:46:15,910
I wish I had the opportunity, and probably, you

836
00:46:15,910 --> 00:46:17,920
know, maybe one day, you know, I really will.

837
00:46:18,090 --> 00:46:21,020
There are people that do that, but I haven’t really

838
00:46:21,050 --> 00:46:25,249
ever had the opportunity to work on things like that.

839
00:46:25,290 --> 00:46:29,390
If any of our listeners know about something along those lines, a tool

840
00:46:29,400 --> 00:46:32,610
or a console, like, a terminal emulator that, like, supports screen

841
00:46:32,640 --> 00:46:35,319
reading—because I was trying to think, like, how I would grep logs, how

842
00:46:35,320 --> 00:46:40,230
I would do the things that I commonly do as a sysadmin, doing operations,

843
00:46:40,570 --> 00:46:43,189
to be able to—because there’s just, like, there’s so much information.

844
00:46:43,190 --> 00:46:44,999
Like, I would be reading a book every time

845
00:46:45,000 --> 00:46:46,630
I try to, like, grep out those patchy logs.

846
00:46:46,809 --> 00:46:46,969
Well,

847
00:46:47,080 --> 00:46:51,070
there are—I mean, you can still because I know plenty of visually

848
00:46:51,080 --> 00:46:54,610
impaired and blind developers, and they still use the terminal.

849
00:46:54,670 --> 00:46:59,900
And these are developers that use both Mac and Windows.

850
00:47:00,080 --> 00:47:04,350
And the thing is, I don’t know all the different, you know, accessibility tools

851
00:47:04,350 --> 00:47:08,620
for that, but usually, yeah, they either use, they’re using JAWS a lot of times.

852
00:47:08,670 --> 00:47:11,750
If they’re on a Mac, they’re obviously having to use VoiceOver.

853
00:47:11,940 --> 00:47:15,110
So, that’s something I’m also trying to dispel.

854
00:47:15,780 --> 00:47:19,389
I know so many awesome blind developers who are

855
00:47:19,389 --> 00:47:22,724
just great at building things, and things like that.

856
00:47:23,029 --> 00:47:26,340
And it’s one of those things of, it’s really a shame that people

857
00:47:26,340 --> 00:47:29,049
don’t realize that because they think, well, obviously you

858
00:47:29,050 --> 00:47:31,577
can’t see; you know, you can’t code and stuff and like that.

859
00:47:31,700 --> 00:47:32,660
That is not true.

860
00:47:32,790 --> 00:47:38,340
I remember, again, one of my very first jobs that focused on accessibility,

861
00:47:38,630 --> 00:47:44,850
my coworker, Ethan, he was great and I was always going with to him to

862
00:47:44,850 --> 00:47:49,299
ask, like, coding questions and things like that because he was awesome.

863
00:47:49,300 --> 00:47:54,429
Like, also his screen reader was very fast, and so I would always hear it.

864
00:47:54,440 --> 00:47:58,790
Like, I got so even before I got really good at using my screen reader,

865
00:47:59,039 --> 00:48:03,340
I was so used to, like—so now, when I use a screen reader, and I’m like,

866
00:48:03,350 --> 00:48:07,490
I’m demoing an issue and things, I have to turn my rate down really,

867
00:48:07,490 --> 00:48:12,590
really, like, [laugh] slow because I’m so used to, like, using it.

868
00:48:12,590 --> 00:48:18,420
It’s like, [high voice] bebabedabeb— [laugh] . Part of the reason is

869
00:48:18,460 --> 00:48:21,640
because before I got really—I was so used to hearing Ethan’s [laugh]

870
00:48:22,970 --> 00:48:24,250
.
I have two more questions.

871
00:48:24,290 --> 00:48:28,189
One is, we talked about how open-source enables

872
00:48:28,190 --> 00:48:30,650
people to repair their software and things.

873
00:48:31,020 --> 00:48:33,890
I’ve, for a long time, been impressed with how much

874
00:48:33,920 --> 00:48:36,489
accessibility features Apple has put into the iPhone.

875
00:48:36,989 --> 00:48:41,009
IOS, I feel like has done a lot in just making some things functional

876
00:48:41,010 --> 00:48:43,250
that I didn’t know existed, that I use some of those tools, just of

877
00:48:43,250 --> 00:48:45,040
those tools just because I’m like, this is convenient and I like it.

878
00:48:45,270 --> 00:48:46,359
It’s a closed-source platform.

879
00:48:46,380 --> 00:48:48,930
If you don’t fit that mold or you don’t have the thing—like, I feel like

880
00:48:48,930 --> 00:48:52,940
Android would be better at some of those things, just because it has more of

881
00:48:52,940 --> 00:48:58,890
an open ethos, or more deep integrations into doing something in the system.

882
00:48:59,250 --> 00:49:01,530
From your experience, has one platform been better

883
00:49:01,530 --> 00:49:04,290
than the other—Android versus iOS—for accessibility?

884
00:49:04,290 --> 00:49:04,776
[laugh]

885
00:49:04,776 --> 00:49:05,830
.
Dangerous [crosstalk]

886
00:49:05,830 --> 00:49:06,610
.
It’s your opinion.

887
00:49:06,610 --> 00:49:07,162
It doesn’t matter.

888
00:49:07,162 --> 00:49:07,790
I mean,

889
00:49:08,070 --> 00:49:09,310
everyone can have an opinion here.

890
00:49:09,509 --> 00:49:11,819
I’m just kind of curious from your experience.

891
00:49:11,820 --> 00:49:11,850
[laugh]

892
00:49:13,080 --> 00:49:16,450
.
So, the thing is that, personally, like, my work

893
00:49:16,450 --> 00:49:20,009
phone is iOS and my personal phone is Android.

894
00:49:20,300 --> 00:49:21,540
I prefer Android.

895
00:49:21,540 --> 00:49:24,569
I feel there’s a lot more when it comes to

896
00:49:24,900 --> 00:49:27,319
accessibility features and tools for me.

897
00:49:27,380 --> 00:49:28,509
So, that’s why I use it.

898
00:49:28,989 --> 00:49:34,390
IOS, I think really, for a long while, was really the kind of star and

899
00:49:34,400 --> 00:49:37,850
standard when it came to accessibility, that really took it seriously.

900
00:49:38,120 --> 00:49:42,120
So, now it’s really about, you know, if you’re if that’s what you’ve spent

901
00:49:42,130 --> 00:49:46,690
years and years using for your accessibility needs, it’s just easier,

902
00:49:46,760 --> 00:49:49,980
like, to—it’s the reason why when people—you know, just like someone who

903
00:49:49,980 --> 00:49:53,350
doesn’t use the iPhone for accessibility, and they switch it Android,

904
00:49:53,350 --> 00:49:57,650
and then they’re like, even if it has a lot of the things that they want,

905
00:49:57,650 --> 00:50:00,900
but they’re like, “I don’t like it because it’s not what I’m used to.”

906
00:50:01,070 --> 00:50:01,240
Yeah.

907
00:50:01,400 --> 00:50:03,079
Familiarity is so important.

908
00:50:03,729 --> 00:50:06,819
And that goes right back to the deprecating software,

909
00:50:06,850 --> 00:50:09,089
and even, like, site redesigns, and everything.

910
00:50:09,100 --> 00:50:12,910
Like, that throws everyone for a loop, when it’s like, oh, like, now everything

911
00:50:12,910 --> 00:50:15,949
is different, and they’re like, oh, we’re going to—“We launched the site.

912
00:50:16,090 --> 00:50:17,669
We’re going to get to the accessibility features.”

913
00:50:17,670 --> 00:50:18,820
I can’t tell you how many times I’ve seen that.

914
00:50:18,820 --> 00:50:19,450
I’m like, “No.

915
00:50:19,460 --> 00:50:20,619
Like, you didn’t launch the site.

916
00:50:20,620 --> 00:50:21,469
It’s not complete.

917
00:50:21,549 --> 00:50:22,219
Like, stop it.”

918
00:50:22,480 --> 00:50:25,410
I mean, for me because I do use, like, the one screen

919
00:50:25,410 --> 00:50:29,590
reader I can say I’m really good at using, is TalkBack.

920
00:50:29,590 --> 00:50:33,160
And that’s because I really started using a screen reader on my

921
00:50:33,160 --> 00:50:36,500
phone, and obviously I had Android, and so that was TalkBack.

922
00:50:37,570 --> 00:50:41,090
Google’s Lookout, which was really built for blind, and visually

923
00:50:41,090 --> 00:50:44,500
impaired people because when I need to, like, read something

924
00:50:44,510 --> 00:50:49,190
on my medicine, like, because a lot of times it’s super, super

925
00:50:49,190 --> 00:50:52,560
tiny; I have hold it up to my face, I won’t be able to read it.

926
00:50:52,820 --> 00:50:56,040
So, being able to, like, take snapshots of, have

927
00:50:56,040 --> 00:50:58,939
it tell me what something is for me, you know.

928
00:50:58,969 --> 00:51:02,540
And then now there’s so much more, and they’re like and they’re constantly

929
00:51:02,760 --> 00:51:06,779
doing innovations and things like that, and adding more features.

930
00:51:06,850 --> 00:51:10,100
But the same thing is true about Apple as well.

931
00:51:10,179 --> 00:51:15,049
So, it does really come down to, well, how long have you been using it?

932
00:51:15,160 --> 00:51:17,640
And then, two, what are you more concerned about?

933
00:51:18,160 --> 00:51:22,690
Do you really want that freedom of being able to build for it?

934
00:51:22,710 --> 00:51:24,340
Because you can definitely do that on the,

935
00:51:24,340 --> 00:51:27,170
you know, Android side, versus on Apple.

936
00:51:27,179 --> 00:51:30,640
So, it really does come down to that I—and so, that’s

937
00:51:30,640 --> 00:51:33,080
where I’m kind of, like, you can make cases for both.

938
00:51:33,089 --> 00:51:35,679
You know, for me personally, I like Android.

939
00:51:36,049 --> 00:51:37,880
One because it was the price, but now that

940
00:51:37,880 --> 00:51:40,820
doesn’t matter because— [laugh] —most of

941
00:51:42,450 --> 00:51:42,500
the— [laugh]

942
00:51:42,500 --> 00:51:45,310

All right, and my last question, I say the most—and maybe the

943
00:51:45,310 --> 00:51:47,690
most spicy, but the moment I was really interested in, and I

944
00:51:47,690 --> 00:51:51,029
didn’t want to talk about the whole time, how has the current

945
00:51:51,049 --> 00:51:57,050
implementation of AI, generative AI, affected accessibility?

946
00:51:57,060 --> 00:51:58,120
Has it at all?

947
00:51:58,340 --> 00:52:00,609
Has there been changes, in that either things

948
00:52:00,610 --> 00:52:02,459
are more difficult or things got better?

949
00:52:02,790 --> 00:52:06,119
I’m really curious, like, how, from that perspective, anything

950
00:52:06,120 --> 00:52:10,269
has kind of bled over into this, like, world of we made it one

951
00:52:10,270 --> 00:52:12,930
way, we shipped it really fast, and half of it doesn’t work.

952
00:52:13,250 --> 00:52:17,630
But is it doing any good in the accessibility world?

953
00:52:18,300 --> 00:52:21,560
I think there is an over-reliance from people who are,

954
00:52:21,560 --> 00:52:25,310
like, okay, generative AI is going to solve accessibility.

955
00:52:25,700 --> 00:52:29,549
And I can definitely—I will say that with my whole chest, there’s

956
00:52:29,580 --> 00:52:34,510
no way generative AI is going to solve all for accessibility.

957
00:52:34,770 --> 00:52:39,200
Am I someone that’s, like, AI has absolutely no use?

958
00:52:39,230 --> 00:52:40,290
I’m not going to say that.

959
00:52:40,290 --> 00:52:41,920
To be honest, I don’t really believe that.

960
00:52:42,160 --> 00:52:44,370
There are some uses that are out there.

961
00:52:44,370 --> 00:52:48,829
I know Be My Eyes is something that I use, that uses AI, which is kind

962
00:52:49,109 --> 00:52:52,240
of great when I’m taking pictures and stuff because I can’t see it.

963
00:52:52,470 --> 00:52:57,299
And having it described, it does a fantastic job, and that is AI-driven.

964
00:52:57,300 --> 00:53:00,040
And I really like that, and other people who are blind and

965
00:53:00,040 --> 00:53:03,819
visually impaired who use Be My Eyes, it’s been really positive.

966
00:53:04,160 --> 00:53:08,920
But there has been this thread that has been kind of weaving

967
00:53:08,920 --> 00:53:13,380
itself around, of, like, again, AI will solve everything when

968
00:53:13,380 --> 00:53:16,409
it comes to accessibility, so you won’t have to worry about it.

969
00:53:16,690 --> 00:53:22,049
And I really, really don’t like that because it’s trying to enforce that

970
00:53:22,100 --> 00:53:26,600
accessibility as an afterthought, that it’s going to be solved, like, by magic.

971
00:53:26,600 --> 00:53:30,950
The same thing where happened with overlays, where it’s like, oh, overlays

972
00:53:30,980 --> 00:53:34,870
are going to solve your accessibility needs, which has turned out is not

973
00:53:34,880 --> 00:53:41,710
true, as [laugh] certain news has come out lately about lawsuits in FTC,

974
00:53:41,860 --> 00:53:46,020
wanting to find companies who have put forth that idea that overlays can

975
00:53:46,020 --> 00:53:50,980
solve everything, and, you know, prevent you from, like, legal liability.

976
00:53:51,290 --> 00:53:54,440
Don’t you love how it’s going to get rid of developers, it’s going to solve

977
00:53:54,440 --> 00:53:58,310
accessibility, world hunger, like, climate chan—like, it’s just out here.

978
00:53:58,340 --> 00:53:59,930
It’s just, it’s magical.

979
00:53:59,940 --> 00:54:00,840
It’s doing everything.

980
00:54:00,850 --> 00:54:03,710
Not, like, it’s just math or anything and compute power, but, like, you know…

981
00:54:04,220 --> 00:54:07,620
That’s the thing, is that when it comes to internet, there’s a lot

982
00:54:07,620 --> 00:54:12,040
that’s missing about disability and accessibility on the internet.

983
00:54:12,290 --> 00:54:15,680
And this is where this AI is getting trained from.

984
00:54:15,690 --> 00:54:22,100
This data is either missing or it is very—it’s ableist, it’s incorrect.

985
00:54:22,370 --> 00:54:28,450
An AI can’t mimic someone with a disability if the data

986
00:54:28,480 --> 00:54:31,800
that it has access—that it’s generated from is flawed.

987
00:54:31,820 --> 00:54:31,830
Oh,

988
00:54:31,830 --> 00:54:32,520
just wait.

989
00:54:32,520 --> 00:54:36,650
Meta is going to come out with an AI bot that is disabled, deaf and,

990
00:54:36,820 --> 00:54:39,390
like, five different colors, and they’re going to be, like, “But we know.”

991
00:54:40,730 --> 00:54:40,760
[laugh]

992
00:54:41,780 --> 00:54:42,530
.
Did you see that?

993
00:54:42,690 --> 00:54:43,570
Like, I about died.

994
00:54:43,790 --> 00:54:45,970
Like, they were like, she’s a black woman, and

995
00:54:45,970 --> 00:54:48,190
a lesbian, and she’s got a she’s a single mom.

996
00:54:48,190 --> 00:54:50,339
And I was like, well, dang [laugh] . We [crosstalk] all three of them.

997
00:54:50,339 --> 00:54:51,495
[laugh]

998
00:54:52,650 --> 00:54:52,940
.
Like, okay.

999
00:54:53,420 --> 00:54:56,330
I didn’t know—I didn’t even know—because I remember Be My Eyes, like, I

1000
00:54:56,330 --> 00:54:59,120
remember when the app came out, and it’s all about, like, connecting visually

1001
00:54:59,120 --> 00:55:02,540
impaired with someone that, like, a real world and, like, as a person that

1002
00:55:02,550 --> 00:55:05,459
had good vision, you could sign up to be the other connection of that.

1003
00:55:05,620 --> 00:55:07,290
I didn’t know they had an AI component of it.

1004
00:55:07,730 --> 00:55:09,620
I wonder if it would help with your color,

1005
00:55:09,690 --> 00:55:11,170
with the fact that you’re color blind.

1006
00:55:11,199 --> 00:55:12,459
No, they’re just going to say, “It’s, like, blue.” And

1007
00:55:12,460 --> 00:55:14,269
I’m like, “Well, I don’t what blue looks like.” It’s fine.

1008
00:55:14,280 --> 00:55:18,340
But, like, I didn’t know that Be My Eyes works on the Meta Ray-Ban glasses.

1009
00:55:18,430 --> 00:55:19,379
That’s really cool.

1010
00:55:19,490 --> 00:55:19,680
Like—

1011
00:55:19,680 --> 00:55:19,826
That is really cool.

1012
00:55:19,826 --> 00:55:22,980
Like, to make that not only, like, hey, I need some help here, but

1013
00:55:22,980 --> 00:55:26,889
also make it convenient is a really cool—like, I think the more

1014
00:55:26,889 --> 00:55:31,220
that shifts into this isn’t a hassle is a better thing for everyone.

1015
00:55:31,230 --> 00:55:32,130
Of just, like, oh, guess what?

1016
00:55:32,150 --> 00:55:35,100
I don’t have to go through 18 different hoops to then

1017
00:55:35,100 --> 00:55:37,330
say, like, I need to, like, cross the street right now.

1018
00:55:37,330 --> 00:55:37,960
I think to

1019
00:55:37,960 --> 00:55:42,550
streamline it into everyday life, and make it easy, to make it

1020
00:55:42,550 --> 00:55:46,050
a part of your day, to assist you is what could really help.

1021
00:55:46,050 --> 00:55:49,820
Like, a lot of the fact that we’re using image detection and stuff like that,

1022
00:55:49,830 --> 00:55:53,220
like, being able to detect something that’s coming in front of you, but, like,

1023
00:55:53,320 --> 00:55:57,429
I wish that was more of what the focus is because AI could be really rad.

1024
00:55:57,429 --> 00:56:01,239
Like, we could use AI to help people, and instead of being,

1025
00:56:01,240 --> 00:56:04,220
like, let’s use it to find immigrants and to try to hunt

1026
00:56:04,250 --> 00:56:07,339
people, let’s use it to help people cross the street, Y’all.

1027
00:56:07,500 --> 00:56:10,370
I swear Elmo needs to talk to, like, half the

1028
00:56:10,370 --> 00:56:11,840
adults in the world because I can’t [crosstalk]

1029
00:56:13,020 --> 00:56:15,850
.
I usually have, like, “What is that on my floor?”

1030
00:56:15,850 --> 00:56:21,000
And it’s usually, like, “It is a fluff ball.” [laugh]

1031
00:56:22,910 --> 00:56:22,940
.
[laugh]

1032
00:56:22,940 --> 00:56:23,359
.
I—and that’s [crosstalk]

1033
00:56:23,500 --> 00:56:23,610

Is this a bug?

1034
00:56:23,610 --> 00:56:23,750
Is it a sock?

1035
00:56:23,750 --> 00:56:25,180
Oh, yes.

1036
00:56:25,180 --> 00:56:25,720
Yes, yes.

1037
00:56:25,770 --> 00:56:30,400
I am totally, like, “What is that?” And so, I never—when—Be

1038
00:56:30,400 --> 00:56:33,264
My Eyes, I never use the portion where, you know, you could

1039
00:56:33,309 --> 00:56:35,580
call someone to have you because I’m like, I got trust issues.

1040
00:56:35,580 --> 00:56:38,299
And I’m like, no, I don’t want you [laugh] . But soon as I, you know,

1041
00:56:38,299 --> 00:56:41,490
I could use something that it’s like, it’s just, I’m like, cool.

1042
00:56:41,719 --> 00:56:45,895
I, [laugh] like, I’ll use it to I’m like, is it—because that’s a lot of it.

1043
00:56:45,895 --> 00:56:48,350
It’s like, what’s this say on the side of,

1044
00:56:48,350 --> 00:56:50,970
like, this thing, you know, of this bottle?

1045
00:56:51,139 --> 00:56:52,359
Yeah, is that a bug?

1046
00:56:53,150 --> 00:56:53,180
[
laugh]

1047
00:56:53,190 --> 00:56:56,460
.
See, I wish people would ask, hey, what could we do, and

1048
00:56:56,460 --> 00:56:58,809
how could we implement this to make your life better?

1049
00:56:58,809 --> 00:56:59,520
Because guess what?

1050
00:56:59,529 --> 00:57:01,600
That’s also going to be more profitable, right?

1051
00:57:01,600 --> 00:57:05,000
If it has a real use, it will still be more profitable

1052
00:57:05,000 --> 00:57:07,940
than just making weird cartoons on the internet.

1053
00:57:07,980 --> 00:57:08,270
I don’t.

1054
00:57:08,340 --> 00:57:11,350
Our first guest on the show, Kelsey, he was just [saying] on BlueSky the

1055
00:57:11,350 --> 00:57:14,983
other day, “The future of AI is whatever makes the most money.” That is

1056
00:57:14,983 --> 00:57:15,086
exactly—

1057
00:57:15,190 --> 00:57:16,160
But that’s all tech.

1058
00:57:17,029 --> 00:57:17,950
This is a business, bro.

1059
00:57:18,060 --> 00:57:21,740
Like, [laugh] every time I have to give a talk about why

1060
00:57:21,740 --> 00:57:25,450
to include women in things, we’re 51% of the population.

1061
00:57:25,450 --> 00:57:26,017
What do you mean?

1062
00:57:26,179 --> 00:57:28,859
In what business do you just not care about your

1063
00:57:28,860 --> 00:57:32,460
audience, or 87% of discretional, like, spending?

1064
00:57:32,460 --> 00:57:33,380
Like, what do you mean?

1065
00:57:33,889 --> 00:57:36,090
I’ve been following you on Twitter for so long, and

1066
00:57:36,090 --> 00:57:39,060
then to BlueSky because the Twitter’s the bad place now.

1067
00:57:39,180 --> 00:57:42,540
Okay, your blog on anxiety—first of all, the picture you

1068
00:57:42,540 --> 00:57:45,190
have behind you is my favorite of your profile pictures.

1069
00:57:45,210 --> 00:57:49,890
It is the cutest freaking picture ever—and then your blog on anxiety,

1070
00:57:50,219 --> 00:57:55,090
there’s a whole part of the blog where she, like, monologs, and starts

1071
00:57:55,100 --> 00:57:58,210
talking about who would play her in the movie in the moment she’s

1072
00:57:58,230 --> 00:58:01,920
having, and it’s Keke Palmer, but, like—or, like hologram of Eartha Kitt.

1073
00:58:02,090 --> 00:58:06,819
I have never been so consumed by a piece of reading.

1074
00:58:07,049 --> 00:58:11,000
There’s a Beyoncé moment in this I’ve never felt so seen.

1075
00:58:11,420 --> 00:58:12,250
It is fire.

1076
00:58:12,279 --> 00:58:13,820
So, the whole time we’re, like, I worked in journalism,

1077
00:58:13,820 --> 00:58:15,390
I was like, “Were you a writer?” Because damn, girl.

1078
00:58:15,420 --> 00:58:18,220
I was like, I went there for tech content.

1079
00:58:18,220 --> 00:58:19,330
I didn’t know what I was getting.

1080
00:58:20,000 --> 00:58:20,920
Who is she?

1081
00:58:20,980 --> 00:58:24,839
Can we be bestie—“Break my Soul” from Beyoncé is in here, okay?

1082
00:58:25,089 --> 00:58:26,540
There’s a whole monologue.

1083
00:58:26,630 --> 00:58:31,190
She said that, “Not only would her cats would be played by black dog

1084
00:58:31,190 --> 00:58:36,210
with little self-preservation and even fewer teeth.” Who sentences that?

1085
00:58:36,260 --> 00:58:36,480
Well, [unintelligible]

1086
00:58:39,710 --> 00:58:43,650
has no—like, he’s with my ex now, but he has,

1087
00:58:43,660 --> 00:58:45,879
like, little too, he has little snaggle tooths.

1088
00:58:46,299 --> 00:58:46,894
Yeah, and he— [laugh]

1089
00:58:46,894 --> 00:58:48,650

This is the most fire paragraph

1090
00:58:48,650 --> 00:58:53,520
of anything that I have ever read in my life, okay?

1091
00:58:53,800 --> 00:58:56,570
In the last part about how Keke is sitting on a chair

1092
00:58:56,570 --> 00:58:58,790
and, like, smoking cigarettes, not that you smoke, but

1093
00:58:58,790 --> 00:59:02,379
because that’s the tropes that—so I pictured it, okay?

1094
00:59:02,380 --> 00:59:04,030
Like, my brain was there.

1095
00:59:04,100 --> 00:59:07,410
I had a whole out-of-body, like, experience and visual.

1096
00:59:07,640 --> 00:59:08,060
It made

1097
00:59:08,060 --> 00:59:09,120
my entire life.

1098
00:59:09,160 --> 00:59:11,810
Yeah, that was the summer, the apart—the

1099
00:59:11,970 --> 00:59:14,570
building’s elevator tried to kill everybody

1100
00:59:16,599 --> 00:59:17,539
in [laugh] the whole—it was the whole thing.

1101
00:59:17,540 --> 00:59:19,620
It kept trying to set itself on fire.

1102
00:59:19,870 --> 00:59:22,996
So, I was having— [laugh] —I was going

1103
00:59:22,996 --> 00:59:23,549
through it.

1104
00:59:23,650 --> 00:59:27,230
I’m so glad that you didn’t die in the elevator, and I am so

1105
00:59:27,230 --> 00:59:31,029
glad that we got this gem out of you not dying in an elevator

1106
00:59:31,330 --> 00:59:34,460
[laugh] . I was sitting here, like, trying not to be late for my

1107
00:59:34,460 --> 00:59:38,100
kids awards, and, like, in between meetings, like, this is amazing.

1108
00:59:38,230 --> 00:59:40,599
Also, Keke Palmer should so play you.

1109
00:59:40,600 --> 00:59:43,040
And, like, I just saw her hair be, like, just a

1110
00:59:43,040 --> 00:59:44,670
little bit messed up because she got look good, right?

1111
00:59:44,690 --> 00:59:48,680
Because it’s movie, but then, like, just in—look, chef’s kisses.

1112
00:59:48,740 --> 00:59:49,990
Chef’s kisses.

1113
00:59:50,030 --> 00:59:51,789
Where should they find you online?

1114
00:59:51,790 --> 00:59:53,139
Where should they read this blog?

1115
00:59:53,469 --> 00:59:56,230
We can have links in the [show notes] , but we can tell them too.

1116
00:59:56,589 --> 00:59:57,560
I’m on BlueSky.

1117
00:59:58,520 --> 01:00:02,210
It’s like, scopicengineer, at whatever the ending of BlueSky is.

1118
01:00:02,230 --> 01:00:06,879
And then my website, you know, crystalprestonwatson.com, and then

1119
01:00:07,040 --> 01:00:10,210
from there, you can get to my blog from there, but you also can

1120
01:00:10,210 --> 01:00:16,069
do a11ysavvy, and that takes you to my Accessibility Savvy blog.

1121
01:00:16,109 --> 01:00:17,859
I do longer form.

1122
01:00:18,180 --> 01:00:20,509
So, I don’t blog, you know, constantly.

1123
01:00:20,510 --> 01:00:24,060
I usually because sometimes, other than when I’m having the

1124
01:00:24,080 --> 01:00:28,680
existential crisis, I do a lot of research with my blogs.

1125
01:00:29,210 --> 01:00:32,370
So, I did one, you know, if you want to read about why

1126
01:00:32,370 --> 01:00:35,279
porn needs to be accessible, I’ve done a blog about that,

1127
01:00:35,279 --> 01:00:37,800
and that required me to go deep into the Supreme Court.

1128
01:00:37,840 --> 01:00:39,120
Accessibility has never

1129
01:00:39,120 --> 01:00:40,730
been so interesting, y’all.

1130
01:00:41,190 --> 01:00:44,129
Like, I just want you to know, like, I was over there with, like, popcorn.

1131
01:00:44,130 --> 01:00:45,500
Like, I was just, like, “What?” Like—

1132
01:00:45,500 --> 01:00:49,470
[laugh] . I’ll probably have some more stuff

1133
01:00:49,500 --> 01:00:51,470
coming, and I’m—definitely some more stuff coming—

1134
01:00:51,530 --> 01:00:52,639
Please write more things.

1135
01:00:52,649 --> 01:00:52,719
—in the year.

1136
01:00:52,729 --> 01:00:54,160
I want to read them, with

1137
01:00:54,379 --> 01:00:57,170
just full excitement and enthusiasm.

1138
01:00:57,900 --> 01:00:59,250
It gave me life, okay?

1139
01:00:59,250 --> 01:01:00,400
I was so bored this morning.

1140
01:01:00,400 --> 01:01:03,360
I had [unintelligible] on a second cup of coffee, just, like, this is amazing

1141
01:01:04,120 --> 01:01:09,410
[laugh] . Do you have any advice for making security more accessible so

1142
01:01:09,410 --> 01:01:12,459
it can be better used, so people don’t feel the need to just go around it?

1143
01:01:12,710 --> 01:01:16,459
People in security really need to talk with people with disabilities.

1144
01:01:16,710 --> 01:01:19,779
I mean, you know because I know I’ve done some, probably

1145
01:01:19,780 --> 01:01:22,759
stuff that’s, like, ehh, this is not really a good InfoSec,

1146
01:01:22,800 --> 01:01:25,700
but I’m going to do it because it’s [laugh] not accessible.

1147
01:01:25,920 --> 01:01:27,309
But I think that’s the biggest thing.

1148
01:01:27,330 --> 01:01:30,479
There’s nothing technological-wise I can really say that would

1149
01:01:30,480 --> 01:01:35,470
make as big of a difference is to really talk to disabled

1150
01:01:35,490 --> 01:01:40,220
users, and really understand, when things aren’t inaccessible,

1151
01:01:40,380 --> 01:01:44,560
how that can cause security risk and security issues.

1152
01:01:44,799 --> 01:01:48,290
We should do a talk together about security and accessibility.

1153
01:01:48,350 --> 01:01:48,970
I would love.

1154
01:01:48,970 --> 01:01:53,250
That I once worked for, you know, like, a federated, like, ID, like,

1155
01:01:53,260 --> 01:01:57,539
company, and so that’s kind of where I got really interested about, you

1156
01:01:57,540 --> 01:02:00,980
know, InfoSec and stuff like that, and that’s why I’ve always kind of, you

1157
01:02:00,980 --> 01:02:04,109
know, in the back of my mind with accessibility, I’m just, like, got to

1158
01:02:04,109 --> 01:02:08,500
keep that in mind in making sure that we’re thinking about accessibility.

1159
01:02:08,590 --> 01:02:12,630
Even though it’s like, well, you can’t—you know, there’s no back-end code for

1160
01:02:12,630 --> 01:02:15,999
accessibility, but it’s like, yeah, but there’s a lot of things you still need

1161
01:02:16,000 --> 01:02:21,459
to think about when it comes to disabled people in information security as well.

1162
01:02:21,520 --> 01:02:23,079
Crystal, thank you so much for coming on the show.

1163
01:02:23,090 --> 01:02:25,420
Thank you everyone for listening, and we will talk to you again soon.

1164
01:02:40,690 --> 01:02:43,700
Thank you for listening to this episode of Fork Around and Find Out.

1165
01:02:43,990 --> 01:02:46,130
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1166
01:02:46,130 --> 01:02:49,310
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1167
01:02:49,420 --> 01:02:51,520
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1168
01:02:51,730 --> 01:02:53,940
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1169
01:02:54,219 --> 01:03:00,490
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1170
01:03:00,490 --> 01:03:03,730
to us there about what you’re interested in sponsoring, and how we can help.

1171
01:03:04,930 --> 01:03:08,110
We hope your systems stay available and your pagers stay quiet.

1172
01:03:08,650 --> 01:03:09,830
We’ll see you again next time.