Module V PDF
Module V PDF
Module V PDF
MODULE V
By Shreeparna Chakraborty
Topics
• Alternative Text for Images: Images should include equivalent alternative text (alt text) in the
markup/code. If alt text isn’t provided for images, the image information is inaccessible, for
example, to people who cannot see and use a screen reader that reads aloud the information
on a page, including the alt text for the visual image. When equivalent alt text is provided, the
information is available to people who are blind, as well as to people who turn off images (for
example, in areas with expensive or low bandwidth). It’s also available to technologies that
cannot see images, such as search engines.
• Keyboard Input: Some people cannot use a mouse, including many older
users with limited fine motor control. An accessible website does not rely on
the mouse; it makes all functionality available from a keyboard. Then people
with disabilities can use assistive technologies that mimic the keyboard,
such as speech input.
• Transcripts for Audio: Just as images aren’t available to people who can’t
see, audio files aren’t available to people who can’t hear. Providing a text
transcript makes the audio information accessible to people who are deaf or
hard of hearing, as well as to search engines and other technologies that
can’t hear. It’s easy and relatively inexpensive for websites to provide
transcripts. There are also transcription services that create text transcripts
in HTML format.
• Text is readable and understandable: Content authors need to ensure that
text content is readable and understandable to the broadest audience
possible, including when it is read aloud by text-to-speech. Such content
includes:
Identifying the primary language of a web page
Identifying the language of text passages, phrases, or other parts of a web page
Providing definitions for any unusual words, phrases, idioms, and abbreviations
Using the clearest and simplest language possible, or providing simplified versions
Meeting this requirement helps software, including assistive technology, to
process text content correctly. For instance, this requirement helps software
to read the content aloud, to generate page summaries, and to provide
definitions for unusual words such as technical jargon. It also helps people who
have difficulty understanding more complex sentences, phrases, and
vocabulary. In particular, it helps people with different types of cognitive
disabilities.
• Users have enough time to read and use the content: Some people need
more time than others to read and use the content. For instance, some
people require more time to type text, understand instructions, operate
controls, or to otherwise complete tasks on a website. Examples of
providing enough time include providing mechanisms to:
Stop, extend, or adjust time limits, except where necessary
Pause, stop, or hide moving, blinking, or scrolling content
Postpone or suppress interruptions, except where necessary
Re-authenticate when a session expires without losing data
• Content can be presented in different ways: For users to be able to change
the presentation of content, it is necessary that;
Headings, lists, tables, input fields, and content structures are marked-up properly
Sequences of information or instructions are independent of any presentation
Browsers and assistive technologies provide settings to customize the presentation
Meeting this requirement allows content to be correctly read aloud, enlarged,
or adapted to meet the needs and preferences of different people. For
instance, it can be presented using custom color combinations, text size, or
other styling to facilitate reading. This requirement also facilitates other forms
of adaptation, including automatic generation of page outlines and summaries
to help people get an overview and to focus on particular parts more easily.
• Functionality is available from a keyboard: Many people do not use the
mouse and rely on the keyboard to interact with the Web. This requires
keyboard access to all functionality, including form controls, input, and
other user interface components. Keyboard accessibility includes:
All functionality that is available by mouse is also available by keyboard
Keyboard focus does not get trapped in any part of the content
Web browsers, authoring tools, and other tools provide keyboard support
Meeting this requirement helps keyboard users, including people using
alternative keyboards such as keyboards with ergonomic layouts, on-screen
keyboards, or switch devices. It also helps people using voice recognition
(speech input) to operate websites and to dictate text through the keyboard
interface.
• Users are helped to avoid and correct mistakes: Forms and other
interaction can be confusing or difficult to use for many people, and, as a
result, they may be more likely to make mistakes. Examples of helping users
to avoid and correct mistakes include:
Descriptive instructions, error messages, and suggestions for correction
Context-sensitive help for more complex functionality and interaction
Opportunity to review, correct, or reverse submissions if necessary
Meeting this requirement helps people who do not see or hear the content,
and may not recognize implicit relationships, sequences, and other cues. It
also helps people who do not understand the functionality, are disoriented or
confused, forget, or make mistakes using forms and interaction for any other
reason.
WCAG 2.0 and 2.1 guidelines that further sub-
divides each principle.
• Second stage: the panel (up to 45 days for a panel to be appointed, plus 6 months
for the panel to conclude). If consultations fail, the complaining country can ask for
a panel to be appointed. The country “in the dock” can block the creation of a panel
once, but when the Dispute Settlement Body meets for a second time, the
appointment can no longer be blocked (unless there is a consensus against
appointing the panel).
Officially, the panel is helping the Dispute Settlement Body make rulings or
recommendations. But because the panel’s report can only be rejected by consensus
in the Dispute Settlement Body, its conclusions are difficult to overturn. The panel’s
findings have to be based on the agreements cited. The panel’s final report should
normally be given to the parties to the dispute within six months. In cases of urgency,
including those concerning perishable goods, the deadline is shortened to three
months.
The main stages are:
• Before the first hearing: each side in the dispute presents its case in writing to the
panel.
• First hearing: the case for the complaining country and defence: the complaining
country (or countries), the responding country, and those that have announced
they have an interest in the dispute, make their case at the panel’s first hearing.
• Rebuttals: the countries involved submit written rebuttals and present oral
arguments at the panel’s second meeting.
• Experts: if one side raises scientific or other technical matters, the panel may
consult experts or appoint an expert review group to prepare an advisory report.
• First draft: the panel submits the descriptive (factual and argument) sections of its
report to the two sides, giving them two weeks to comment. This report does not
include findings and conclusions.
• Interim report: The panel then submits an interim report, including its findings and
conclusions, to the two sides, giving them one week to ask for a review.
• Review: The period of review must not exceed two weeks. During that time, the
panel may hold additional meetings with the two sides.
• Final report: A final report is submitted to the two sides and three weeks later, it is
circulated to all WTO members. If the panel decides that the disputed trade
measure does break a WTO agreement or an obligation, it recommends that the
measure be made to conform with WTO rules. The panel may suggest how this
could be done.
• The report becomes a ruling: The report becomes the Dispute Settlement Body’s
ruling or recommendation within 60 days unless a consensus rejects it. Both sides
can appeal the report (and in some cases both sides do).
• Appeals: Either side can appeal a panel’s ruling. Sometimes both sides do so.
Appeals have to be based on points of law such as legal interpretation — they
cannot re-examine existing evidence or examine new issues.
Each appeal is heard by three members of a permanent seven-member Appellate
Body set up by the Dispute Settlement Body and broadly representing the range of
WTO membership. Members of the Appellate Body have four-year terms. They have
to be individuals with recognized standing in the field of law and international trade,
not affiliated with any government.
The appeal can uphold, modify or reverse the panel’s legal findings and conclusions.
Normally appeals should not last more than 60 days, with an absolute maximum of 90
days.
The Dispute Settlement Body has to accept or reject the appeals report within 30
days — and rejection is only possible by consensus.
• If the country that is the target of the complaint loses, it must follow the
recommendations of the panel report or the appeals report. It must state its
intention to do so at a Dispute Settlement Body meeting held within 30 days of the
report’s adoption. If complying with the recommendation immediately proves
impractical, the member will be given a “reasonable period of time” to do so. If it
fails to act within this period, it has to enter into negotiations with the complaining
country (or countries) in order to determine mutually-acceptable compensation —
for instance, tariff reductions in areas of particular interest to the complaining side.
• If after 20 days, no satisfactory compensation is agreed, the complaining side may
ask the Dispute Settlement Body for permission to retaliate (to “suspend
concessions or other obligations”). This is intended to be temporary, to encourage
the other country to comply. It could for example take the form of blocking imports
by raising import duties on products from the other country above agreed limits to
levels so high that the imports are too expensive to sell — within certain limits. The
Dispute Settlement Body must authorize this within 30 days after the “reasonable
period of time” expires unless there is a consensus against the request.
• The Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights
(TRIPS) is an international legal agreement between all the member nations
of the World Trade Organization (WTO). It establishes minimum standards
for the regulation by national governments of different forms of intellectual
property (IP) as applied to nationals of other WTO member nations.
• The TRIPS Agreement provides that a right holder must be able to initiate
fair and equitable civil judicial procedures against an infringer of IP rights
covered under the Agreement. It also contains disciplines on evidence, the
right of information and indemnification of the defendant.
• Judicial authorities must be able to award three types of remedies:
injunctions to order a party to stop its infringing action, damages to
compensate for the injury caused by the infringement, as well as other
remedies, such as the removal of infringing goods from channels of
commerce or their destruction, subject to certain conditions.
• Under the TRIPS Agreement, criminal procedures and penalties are only
mandatory in cases of wilful trademark counterfeiting or copyright piracy
carried out on a commercial scale. Members may, but are not obliged to,
provide for criminal procedures to be applied in other cases of infringement
of IP rights, in particular where those are committed wilfully and on a
commercial scale.
Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution
Policy (UDRP)
• The UDRP has been adopted by ICANN.
• Under the policy, most types of trademark-based domain-name disputes
must be resolved by agreement, court action, or arbitration before a
registrar will cancel, suspend, or transfer a domain name.
• Disputes alleged to arise from abusive registrations of domain names (for
example, cybersquatting) may be addressed by expedited administrative
proceedings that the holder of trademark rights initiates by filing a
complaint with an approved dispute-resolution service provider.
• To invoke the policy, a trademark owner should either (a) file a complaint in
a court of proper jurisdiction against the domain-name holder (or where
appropriate an in-rem action concerning the domain name) or (b) in cases of
abusive registration submit a complaint to an approved dispute-resolution
service provider.
• The remedies available to a complainant pursuant to any proceeding before
an Administrative Panel shall be limited to requiring the cancellation of your
domain name or the transfer of your domain name registration to the
complainant.
• ICANN will not participate in any way in any dispute between complainant
and any party other than regarding the registration and use of the domain
name in dispute.
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